What is a feal? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange Fail (feal) and divot, 'a rural servitude, importing a right in the proprietor of the dominant tenement to cut and remove turf for fences or for thatching or covering houses or the like purposes, within the dominant lands' (Bell Dict Law Scot ) [Citations from 1593, 1693, 1754, 1773, 1814 (the Scott quotation) omitted ]
Fall, fell, felled - English Language Usage Stack Exchange How is the causative form of fall used in English? In the present tense, often enough, A tree falls in the woods, but a logger falls trees as well but in the past tense, A tree fell in the woo
Is there a term that defines nostalgia for something youve never . . . +1 because I was thinking of wistfulness before I scrolled down to see your answer I'm not sure you'd normally be wistful about something in the future that was never in the past though - unless it's a future which the past present has already ruled out for some reason
Etymology of div meaning a stupid or foolish person Acting like a div yesterday: a stupid or foolish person I started to wonder how this term of abuse came about Urban Dictionary has a quaint tale: Actually originates from prison slang in the UK