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teh查看 teh 在百度字典中的解释百度英翻中〔查看〕
teh查看 teh 在Google字典中的解释Google英翻中〔查看〕
teh查看 teh 在Yahoo字典中的解释Yahoo英翻中〔查看〕





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  • Is teh an English word? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Teh was used as an example that if every single English word was included in a spell-checker it would decrease (the spell-checker's) utility (very few people know or use "teh", it's auto-corrected to "the") I've checked both on-line and paper dictionaries and can't find it, can anyone confirm that it is an English word and what it's meaning is?
  • orthography - meaning and usage of teh - English Language Usage . . .
    — Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone Hagrid’s pronunciation of to is spelled ter in the book, so teh seems to be an article, at least according to Wiktionary However, it seems to be an uncommon usage, so I would please like to know its meaning, plus when this particular usage may be safely adopted
  • etymology - Was tea ever pronounced as teh-ah? - English Language . . .
    0 Follow up on SciFi SE Pronunciation of teatime: in my answer I argue that "teh-ah" as spelled out once in a discworld novel is a pronunciation-spelling It is essentially not clear why tea ti: is spelled and pronounced the way it is to begin with According to one comment by @Tetsujin (below), tee-ah may be heard from South-Yorkshire
  • Origin of the beatings will continue until morale improves
    What is the origin of the phrase the beatings will continue until morale improves? There is a Metafilter and a Quora out on it, but they are inconclusive, and the phrase does not appear in the
  • grammaticality - Which is correct: the below information or the . . .
    I frequently see statements that refer to something later in the text that use a phrase such as "the below information" Is it more correct instead to say "the information below" (or "the following
  • word choice - At the beginning or in the beginning? - English . . .
    Are both expressions "At the beginning" "In the beginning" valid and equivalent? The first "seems wrong" to me, but it has more Google results
  • word choice - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Both (taking just the relevant homonym of rest) have quite a few meanings; 'remainder' has some rather more specialist senses Looking at just one situation where there is an obvious choice: The rest of the day is the normal, unmarked expression The remainder of the day sounds either more formal or serious - or just more pretentious Care should be taken to keep to Orwell's second rule unless
  • What is the origin of the phrase beyond the pale?
    Pale in this idiom comes from Latin pālus 'stake'; it means a fencepost, and by ordinary extension it also means the fence itselt, and the area it contains or delimits So beyond the pale just means "outside the boundaries" Normally, of course, the "boundaries" are metaphors for human activities, rather than referring to a physically bounded location
  • idiom requests - What’s a good alternative to “The devil is in the . . .
    Devil is in the details: The details of a matter are its most problematic aspect The idiom the devil is in the details means that mistakes are usually made in the small details of a project Usually it is a caution to pay attention to avoid failure An older, and slightly more common, phrase God is in the detail means that attention paid to small things has big rewards, or that details are
  • single word requests - What is the name of the area of skin between the . . .
    What is the name of the area that is between the nose and the upper lip, circled in figure 1 below? source of face image I have found that the area circled in figure 2, the small indentation under





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