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  • offensive language - Is schmuck really an obscene word? - English . . .
    Schmuck is supposedly an obscene Yiddish term for the male sex organ, yet it appears all of the time in the media as an American idiom for a jerk Can one use it in polite company?
  • What is the difference between automate and automize?
    "Automize" isn't in Merriam-Webster, and has one attestation from 1902 in the OED (from the American Journal of Psychology, referring to automatism rather than automation) Most hits are for companies named "Automize", rather than for the word in its (hypothetical) general sense I would not recommend using it As for "automation" vs "automization", both are well-attested and synonymous Use
  • Difference between as regards and in regard to
    In my understanding the phrases "as regards" and "in regard to" are interchangeable, but an editor once corrected the former to the latter in my writing May I ask what is the difference? The sente
  • Schlong and its etymology - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Compare schmuck As a verb, "to have sex with," by 2005 Related: Schlonged; schlonging It does have a verbal usage, but strangely it says it started to be used in 1969 The linked Ngram Viewer seems to support it What is its etymology? How did it get its traction? Is the word shlong or sclung related with it? How vulgar is this word?
  • american english - Have not versus do not have - English Language . . .
    English is almost unique in the phenomenon of do-support Only a few of the Celtic languages and two very small Italian dialects use do in the way English does (and another that uses have in a similar way) It is not unusual, then, that people coming to English from any other language will have a bit of trouble with our use of the word do In general, the verb to do is a required part of
  • meaning in context - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Etymonline com gives a lot of definitions regarding an implement or instrument, specifically inanimate objects But the word has crept into English slang in reference to people, as in "he is a to
  • Where did the term OK Okay come from? - English Language Usage . . .
    I've heard lots of varying histories of the term "OK" Is there any evidence of the true origin of the term?
  • Should I always use a comma after e. g. or i. e. ?
    @VincentKrebs in that example the "e g " seems parenthetical: it could be omitted entirely Therefore, it should have two commas (one before and one after) or none, the choice being a matter of style and possibly dependent on factors such as for example the length of the sentence For example, I think I prefer the previous sentence with the two commas around "for example," but I left them out
  • Correct, clear, concise way to use potato-potato in writing
    "You say tomato, I say tomato" and the song from the beginning As an informal turn of speech, it can be used to show that two or more parties are talking about basically the same thing but not in
  • The largest, greatest, highest or biggest number of
    I'm not a native speaker, and my teacher taught me to use quot;the biggest number of quot; when comparing amounts of some things, but I've checked it in google which seems like quot;the lar





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