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- Orange Glow in Sky - DetroitYES Forums
Two nights ago there was an orange glow in the sky that stayed there all night and into the morning hours It was to the south-east when viewed from Roseville, Eastpointe and Metro Beach [[as I still call it) I do not know if it was there last night Does anyone know what caused it or might have caused it? 3905039049
- What do you call the center of a fruit that you eat?
However, note that different scientific parts are eaten depending on the fruit and its structure In an apple, the fleshy part is the mesocarp In an orange, the juicy parts of the segments are actually the endocarp Contrast this to a drupe, where the endocarp is a hard stone that is definitely not eaten
- Orange sun rising in Milky Skies. It must be Forest Fire Smoke Season Again
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- About using singular as food - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
If you like "oranges", it means you like more than just orange flavoring; "oranges" evokes the idea that you like taking a whole orange and eating it When you say "I like orange", it can mean two things: It can mean that you like orange flavoring — the taste of orange If you are talking about cooking, maybe you like orange in certain foods
- What is the origin of the term ginger for red-headed people?
We don't say “orangehead” because when the term was coined, English didn't differentiate between red and orange ' So, according to this, the term 'redhead' appeared by default, not because of truly red hair From the OED, 'ginger' seems to have been used for less flaming hair from the onset –
- grammatical number - Conjunction or and the plural rule - English . . .
I would naturally say the apple or the orange is good But it seems that we should also say the apples or the orange is good ; but the orange or the apples are good Is it correct? Otherwise, if I am thinking of "this or that or both", is it correct to use the plural? And say the apple or the orange are (both) good
- Should you use I thought it was or I thought it is when talking . . .
As you can see, both statements are grammatical, but their meanings depend on what the author is trying to say So, the answer to your question concerning whether you should use red was called orange or red is called orange depends on what you're trying to say, on exactly what it was you used to think
- A, B, C, or etc. vs. A, B, or C, etc. vs. A, B, C, etc.
"Etc " means "and so on"; therefore, "and etc " is always incorrect, as is "A, B, or etc " Normal usage is "A, B, C, etc " (this is the norm, a list of things that is long and generally well known), "A or B, C or D, etc " (where each letter represents some kind of distinct and clear categorical choice that will be obvious to the reader and essentially impossible to confuse -- this is probably
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