Are eery and eerie equally acceptable spellings? The "eery" spelling is, I note after frequent use, given as the preferred alternative by most anagram generation sites when the entered letters do not allow "eerie" Presumably, therefore, "eery" is considered to be perfectly correct as far as the organisers of those sites are concerned
Is an indentation needed for a new paragraph? Is an indentation (Tab button in Word) needed for a new paragraph when you start one? I was told to do that a long time ago but 3 years after I stopped doing it and have done it since Are you me
Word for eerily quiet manner when plotting something scheming I remember seeing a word that defined someone's creepy manner or eery quietness when having plotted against or going to plot against someone thing If not that, just the quietness associated with psychopathic tendencies (think of a creepy kid in class that's smiling to himself after the class discovery of his murdering of the pet guinea pig )
each day → daily; every other day →? [duplicate] Is there an adjective that means "every other day"? I found "bidaily" but it seems to mean "twice a day", not "every second day" (not even both as "biweekly" does) I'd need this word to very conc
Whats the difference between every time and everytime? What's the difference between everytime and every time? I'm a little confused about them, they both seem to have same meaning Excluding their spelling, are there any other differences between them?
meaning - Most every and almost every - English Language Usage . . . Most, as an adverb, can be used informally to mean “almost” In that sense, there is no difference in meaning between “most every” and “almost every”, except that the first one is informal I should add that the Corpus of Contemporary American English has 290 occurrences of “most every”, compared to 5027 for “almost every” The second alternative is thus vastly favoured, at