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- Wight and Wiht is white? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
Wight is pronounced "white" Wight can be found as "wiht" I have heard people pronounce this as "wit" Is this mispronounced or for example dutch white = WIT?
- Height and Weight - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
Height and Weight — How to write them when abbreviations are not used He was a 6-foot 5-inch man (Not: 6-foot-5-inch man, with three hyphens ) She gave birth to a 7-pound 11-ounce baby (Not
- Isnt there another word for someone who puts together scissors?
And there's the viral video by Shaun Bloodworth, which is said to have been responsible for saving Ernest Wight from closure In another ten-year-old video the term is used yet again but by a different filmmaker: “Cliff works as a master scissors putter-togetherer
- Is there a word for a person who cant differentiate between right and . . .
The word amoral may be what you want, but people who act amorally may be able to differentiate between what others call right and wrong, but they do not recognize any worth in the distinction and act accordingly For a term that means someone who who does not recognize the difference between right and wrong, we can go back to the somewhat-archaic term moral imbecile Such persons need not be
- Difference between Warm regards and Best regards
Warm Regards is relatively unusual, even in the more common form Warmest Regards It's probably best reserved for close friends relatives Best Regards is quite common, even in "semi-formal" emails and business letters today Though I personally wouldn't use it unless I've personally met the addressee It's also fine for personal correspondence - but some may feel it's become a bit
- word usage - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
at the same time, it has particular associations, that 'island' does not, with being poetic or flowery or in fixed phrases or very particular islands ('Isle of Wight') So you would be totally understood if you used it instead of island, it is technically correct, but it would sound slightly fancy, like you're trying to be poetic
- What is the origin of weighing the pig doesnt make it fatter
There are multiple versions of this saying: Weighing the pig doesn't make it [any] fatter Weighing the pig doesn't make it grow [any faster] Weighing the pig doesn't make it gain weight Weighing the pig doesn't fatten it Weighing a pig doesn't make it heavier But I noticed a couple of odd things about this bit of down-home wisdom First, a Google Books search reveals that the oldest match
- Is there a word for words like dozen, score, gross that refer to . . .
I'd like to know whether the words that describe numerical quantities have a name to describe them as a group This would be similar to how onomatopoeia is a word to describe a group of words tha
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