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  • word choice - more fair or fairer - Is more fair an acceptable . . .
    Is it acceptable to say "more fair" as opposed to "fairer" ? Is one more appropriate than the other?
  • Usage of comparative with a set of adjectives
    Like fun, just is one of the one-syllable adjectives whose comparative uses more (I can't think of any beside these two) And because it's more just, they've used more fair for parallelism (you could also say fairer and more just)
  • What does to fairer climes mean? - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    Fairer climes is somewhere the weather or at least climate (i e climes) is better Following someone's scent there has a number of meanings, in this case I'm guessing prose of 50+ years ago then it's probably an affectionate reference to a perfume However, In modern day parlance it might indicate a 'soap dodger' — how times have changed The final 'at last' implies a long term relationship
  • Difference between Emend and Amend - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    What's the difference between the verbs to emend and to amend? They both have the same definition on Oxford Online Dictionary as follows: emend: Make corrections and revisions to (a text): 't
  • word usage - When is sex sex, and when is it gender? - English . . .
    This will probably be closed as opinion-based, but I think it's interesting that in the Victorian era 'sex' only meant 'gender', so expressions like 'the fairer sex' were used freely without any risk of embarrassment
  • Does fair complexion mean light or white skin color?
    n Caribbean (originally) a white colonist or settler in the Caribbean; (later) a descendent of these people; a Caribbean person of European or mixed ancestry, having a light or fair complexion To have a fair complexion is thus a relative term -> to have a complexion that is fairer than might be expected
  • Feminine version of gentleman and a scholar
    There is no exact equivalent of the idiom, and "lady and a scholar" is just going to sound silly or patronizing I suggest just dropping the idiom altogether and offering a gender neutral compliment such as "you are very generous and thoughtful" While you're at it, you could probably also 86 "fairer sex" Gender neutrality is hard, but worthwhile
  • Whats the proper usage of the word legion in terms of a large . . .
    I think it's fairer to leave it closed A valid question on "legion" might relate to its transition from a highly specific usage as a proper noun to the more general usage as an adjective but without the word changing its ending – compared to, say, "Satan" becoming "Satanic" (similarly Orwellian, Darwinian, Celtic)
  • How offensive is it to call someone a slag in British English? (NSFW)
    So the notion that slag came directly from the iron and steel industry to the loose woman meaning is rather an over-simplification The first slags were men, when the meaning was weak-willed and untrustworthy, and it is this meaning and heritage that initially underpinned the word's transfer to the fairer sex
  • What is a feminine version of guys?
    From all the answers, it's clear that using a masculine term (eg "guys") is considered sexist (see Leopd's comment), and using a feminine term (eg "gals") is also considered sexist (see The Raven's answer) The only way to be safe, then, is to use a gender-neutral term, eg "people" Of course, if you use "guys" for males and "people" for females, you're just reintroducing a distinction: you





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