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  • word usage - Is it rerun or re-run? - English Language Usage . . .
    As seen in the Oxford Dictionary of English, the correct spelling is rerun: rerun verb riːˈrʌn (reruns, rerunning; past reran; past participle rerun) [with obj ] show, stage, or perform again: she can stop the video and rerun a short sequence noun ˈriːrʌn an event or programme which is run again: the World Cup rerun
  • tenses - Using have ran or have run - English Language Usage . . .
    I was editing a piece recently and saw this structure "Once you have ran the process, you " I have always used "have run", but wasn't sure if "have ran" is acceptable in modern English
  • etymology - What is the origin of being in the pudding club . . .
    I can't tell you whether it's used today, but it was still current in 1976 I'm watching a rerun of a British sitcom (originally aired in May 1976) in which the phrase was used; the character who used it, and the two who understood it, are urban (London), are lower-middle class economically, and are middle-class in outlook (they value outward respectability and the upholding of middle-class
  • grammar - It worths it, it worth it or it is worth it? - English . . .
    Not only is it certainly not “very common”, there is simply no such thing as “It doesn’t worth it ” ” This is a made-up answer claiming something that does not exis
  • Should a note be addressed with Hi all or Hi All?
    It is common to begin an email with the greeting "hi all" when the note is addressed to multiple recipients What, however, is the correct capitalization of "all" in this context? Does it become a
  • Need be vs. Needs to be - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Stack Exchange Network Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q A communities including Stack Overflow, the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers
  • You think youre right but youre actually wrong
    What's a word for when someone is wrong, and they know they're wrong, but they insist that they are right? EDIT: If someone does something and you know they did it, and they know they did it, but
  • A word for a chance to makeup for past mistakes
    rerun fresh start I recognize that this is a long list, but none of the single words here work for me - they're all a little too on the nose I'm inspired by the Biblical concept of the Jubilee year, a year in which all debts were forgiven


















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