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  • What is the short form for little ? Is it lil or lil?
    The form lil is used, but the most common variant seems to be lil' (capitalized when it is a name) Wikipedia "Lil" is a kind of prefix and is the short form of "little" It is often spelled with an apostrophe as "Lil'" or "Li'l" When used as a prefix in comic or animation it can refer to a specific style of drawing where the characters appear in a chubby, childlike style These are normally
  • etymology - Why did English borrow the French word rendezvous with . . .
    Wiktionary has: << ron-day-voo: Eye dialect spelling of rendezvous [noun and verb] >> So 'Why did English borrow the French word "rendezvous" with its original spelling and silent letters, while many French loanwords are anglicized?' perhaps needs tweaking The etymology of this and related loanwords since their appearance in the English lexicon, and what precisely is meant by 'English' in
  • Why are black people referred to as colored people?
    When someone calls a black person quot;a colored guy quot;, I can't help but think about the question quot;are white people colorless? Isn't white a color too? quot;
  • How to say I dont believe you in a more academic way?
    (A) this is a vague, Miss Manners -type question, (B) Lill has NOT supplied any more info despite a tremendous amount of input and many asking for clarification
  • Is there a logical umbrella term for onboarding and offboarding?
    FumbleFingers - that would be fine, really Onboarding offboarding are pretty common in the context we're using them, but joining and leaving make good sense I still can't think of a decent umbrella term, though : ( Yoseph - there are more activities than just granting or obtaining access - I'll update the question to reflect that, sorry
  • Is the phrase “nitty-gritty” racist? - English Language Usage . . .
    A BBC article, dated 15 May 2002, asserts the expression nitty-gritty is banned from British politics (and also by police services) due to its supposedly disagreeable origin The emphasis in bold i
  • punctuation - When do we need to put a comma after so at the . . .
    I noticed that most of the times when the conjunction "so" is used at the beginning of a sentence, it is followed by a comma: So, this gets published but the fact that it is inaccurate gets moder
  • Sixth from last? pro pre ante pen ult - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    There is a latin sequence of terms that refer to order from last: ultimate, last pen ultimate, second from last ante penultimate, third from last pre antepenultimate, forth from last pro preantepenultimate, fifth from last xxx propreantepenultimate, sixth from last? Has the final word ever been used or coined anywhere?
  • When should I use a vs an? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    In the following example, is it appropriate to use a or an as the indefinite article, and why? He ate __ green apple I know that in the case of just "apple", it would be "an apple," but I've heard
  • orthography - Is there a rule for “‑ance” vs. “‑ence”? - English . . .
    Yes, this is for real No, there really is no rule There used to be a rule in Latin, though Etymonline explains in more detail: -ance suffix attached to verbs to form abstract nouns of process or fact (convergence from converge), or of state or quality (absence from absent); ultimately from L -antia and -entia, which depended on the vowel in the stem word As Old French evolved from Latin





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