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  • What is the origin of the idiom like pulling teeth?
    The pittance of a few dollars, which came like pulling so many teeth I found an earlier example from 1831 published in the Foreign Missionary Register of The American Baptist Missionary Magazine (Vol 12, October 1832, No 10), in the 23rd October 1831 entry of Mr Judson's Journal:
  • should like to vs. would like to - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    Unless perhaps if you are writing fiction (Bilbo should totally use should that way, a hard-bitten cyberpunk detective in 23rd Century Kyoto, not so much) If nothing else, ambiguous uses can be worse with should:
  • Roman numerals used for ordinals - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    In Spanish, “el siglo diecinueve” [the nineteenth century, literally the century nineteen] is written as “el siglo XIX” with small capitals However, “XIX” only represents a cardinal used in place of an ordinal, because ordinals past ten or twelve take forms that most everyday speakers find challenging or unnecessarily complicated I thought you might find this relevant somehow
  • etymology - What is origin of the phrase tits up - English Language . . .
    According to the The Phrase Finder it is might be of military origin, but there is no real evidence to support this view: Inoperative; broken The term is also used to mean fallen over (on one's back) Tits up: This is a 20th century phrase, probably of military origin There's certainly no mention of it in print prior to WWII It has been suggested that the term derives from the behaviour of
  • etymology - Origin of the breach sense of compromise - English . . .
    The next Day, (Feb 4 ) the House proceeded (according to Order) to take into Consideration the Matter of the Complaint, [made to the House the 23rd Day of January last] That there had been some undue Practices in relation to the compromising the Election for the Borough of Stafford, before the Merits of the said Election were heard before the
  • Understanding as of, as at, and as from
    I'd appreciate your assistance in helping me particularly understand how to use the phrase "as of" properly What is the proper interpretation of the following sentence? "I need you to get me all
  • Is English actually a pidgin or creole?
    1 If so, when did it Middle English stop being such> I am tempted to say "Three twelve pm on Tuesday 23rd April 1578" The transitional evolution of a language is a continuum The continuum continues today
  • The definite article implying the generic idea of something
    The normal way to express "price of gas" is to include the definite article Perhaps it helps direct the reader or hearer to the larger idea "the price of gas somewhere," though the somewhere may differ from one instance to another But we would also say "the price of a cup of coffee at the Starbucks on 23rd Street," or "the price of freedom"—the first instance being extremely specific and
  • WW and OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    So for example, with WW, W is the 23rd letter, so WW = (23 * 26^0) + (23 * 26^1) = 621, the 621st column from the left in Excel That means the author of the article was shown a document with 621 columns of different data, which is incredibly silly, IMO





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