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37,900 | 139,130 | 76823_0 | When should one use the word "coming" vs. "going"? For example, is it "I'm coming home." or "I'm going home."? (Ehhh maybe that was a bad example). "Are you coming?" vs. "Are you going?" may be a better example. I always get confused by this expression but most people I notice use the word "coming". |
37,901 | 168,124 | 76823_0 | For example: Maybe the item of travel city include more than one city, But what's the correct writing of Travel City. Should I use Travel City/Cities? Travel Date: 0503, 2014; 0504, 2014 Travel City: Washington; NY,L.A. etc. |
37,902 | 137,898 | 76823_0 | Is walking a gerund in this sentence? I think while is acting as a conjunction. . . Gloria tripped and fell while walking down the street. |
37,903 | 137,896 | 76823_0 | I got a sentence when watching a dialogue: > There is nothing a guy can do that even comes close. In my opinion, "nothing" has an attributive clause: "a guy can do"; and in this atributive clause, "nothing" comes as object so that the object was absence. However, "that even comes close" confused me, as it is also likel... |
37,904 | 39,684 | 76823_0 | In following, a writer quotes and summarizes Bill Read's remarks regarding Hurricane Irene: > “This is not just a coastal event,” said Bill Read, director of the National > Hurricane Center. He said he was highly confident of the storm’s track, > meaning that it would be a rare hurricane that travels right along the > ... |
37,905 | 33,061 | 76823_0 | I saw this phrase used in this New Yorker article. I think I understand it intuitively, especially with the help of google images, but I'd like to know for sure. |
37,906 | 18,860 | 76823_0 | In India there is a popular slogan: > East or west India is the best. Is this slogan grammatically correct? I know directions have _the_ before them. > The east or the west India is the best. Is this how the slogan should read? |
37,907 | 18,866 | 76823_0 | So I am trying to determine what kind of subjunctive is being used in "if...then" utterences such as: "If you are hungry, eat something." "If you are tired, go to sleep." etc. These phrases seem to have an unspoken "should" as in: "If you are hungry then you should eat something." and "If you are happy and you know it,... |
37,908 | 18,864 | 76823_0 | What are some other ways I can say something that means the same thing as "little by little"? The only other thing I know is "bit by bit." |
37,909 | 71,251 | 76823_0 | I am joining a team and just as I join, I say this sentence. Is the "now" correct in the end of the sentence or how to make the sentence more fluent? > I am glad to be part of this family now. **I want to say that I am glad to join the team (family). But if I just say that "I am glad to be part of this family." (withou... |
37,910 | 18,868 | 76823_0 | Can someone explain to me what _booty-trap_ means in this sentence? > We moved back in there, setting up booty traps. Each man booty-trapped his > own home. |
37,911 | 18,869 | 76823_0 | > “We’re now into a new **metaphor** for the web,” Kelly says noting that we > started with the desktop on computers, then pages for the web. Now the > realtime stream connected to the web is the thing I know that a metaphor is a writing technique. But two things should have some common characterstics so that one can b... |
37,912 | 71,256 | 76823_0 | Is there a difference between the two: _ad nauseam_ and _ad nauseum_? |
37,913 | 84,049 | 76823_0 | > There are several reasons proposed for the collapse of the bridge. Is this present simple tense or the present perfect tense? I thought it might be the latter since there is a retrospective aspect to the sentence. However, I am quite unsure. |
37,914 | 187,060 | 76823_0 | I am looking for a word or phrase that means "a long sought out goal that seems impossible to achieve" but without any religious connotations. Any suggestions? My intended usage is as follows: > The _holy grail_ in ABC is to identify XYZ where ABC is an academic field of study and XYZ is a solution approach with desire... |
37,915 | 162,370 | 76823_0 | I've always written 'everyone's' but when I was writing a post for my blog the Spell Check came up with 'every one's" Which one is it? |
37,916 | 139,019 | 76823_0 | The sentence structure > _Subject_ has got _noun_ to _verb_. basically places a noun behind a verb with the help of the infinitive marker _to_ , and it makes the transitive verb looks as if it is an intransitive verb. A common example would be > I've got something to do now. I'll let you know when I'm done. (If I didn'... |
37,917 | 84,043 | 76823_0 | I have often heard people use the word "paramount" to mean "the most important", which I think is correct usage. However, I have also heard them use "parmountacy" or "paramountcy". e.g. The changes we are making establishes the paramountacy of international law in these cases. I am wondering if there is such a word as ... |
37,918 | 84,042 | 76823_0 | I was interested in the phrase, “ _We had a terrible breakup, like horrific_ ,” appearing in New York Times’ (September 26) theater review, titled “Old Friends Whose Past Is Always Present,” which comments on the Debate Society’s shows. It goes: > “I won’t tell that story,” he responded. Their director, Oliver Butler, ... |
37,919 | 113,417 | 76823_0 | Is this label telling the consumer that it is best to consume the drink 7 to 10 days after opening it?  I know what they are getting at, but I feel like it should say "Best if consumed within 7 to 10 days **of** opening". Is my suspicion correct? **Thi... |
37,920 | 40,195 | 76823_0 | Is a sentence like > He asked if I would lend him my car. correct, or should it be > He asked if I lent him my car. or something else? |
37,921 | 113,415 | 76823_0 | Why does " _issue_ " have a negative connotation in the US? I have used _issue_ as a synonym of _tema_ in Spanish. |
37,922 | 113,412 | 76823_0 | What's jagger/a jagger in the title of the song _Moves Like Jagger_ by Maroon 5? I've looked up the word on Urbandictionary and there are all sorts of different definitions on it. I've also found out that Jagger is also a name of the lead vocalist of the Rolling Stones. So what does jagger in this song refers to? |
37,923 | 113,413 | 76823_0 | Is _warn_ a synonym of "let someone know"? I want to say "te mando este mensaje para avisarte de que". Can I say "I'm writing you this email to warn you about"? |
37,924 | 113,410 | 76823_0 | I know the plane lands in Boston but can I say I landed at Boston ? |
37,925 | 113,411 | 76823_0 | Especially in lyric-writing, where used more figuratively than literally, _e.g. (mental) wandering_ and _wondering_ , the two seem often interchangeable. And I can see _wondering_ being conceived as an analogue of _wandering_ (only, in one's mind). However from peering at their etymologies (see: wonder and wander), it ... |
37,926 | 123,375 | 76823_0 | I wonder why tag questions have a tag that is not the other possibility of the sentence that precedes the tag. For instance: 1) "This tag question is an example, or is it?" Shouldn't it be: 2) "This tag question is an example, or isn't it? The negative sentence: 3) "This tag question is not an example, or is it?" (2) a... |
37,927 | 15,746 | 76823_0 | Can someone provide a transcription for the name "Kyrylo" - how it will actually sound? |
37,928 | 40,198 | 76823_0 | I'm not a native speaker. However, I have tried a lot during last 10 years to learn English at a high level of proficiency and to become fluent in conversation. However, when I talk to some of my friends in US over Skype (found via my profession), they tell me that I talk like a foreigner. But they don't know why is th... |
37,929 | 159,929 | 76823_0 | I heard this word on some TV show and i have been trying to find its meaning(but they weren't of help much). Could someone please tell me ? |
37,930 | 159,922 | 76823_0 | In reference to how to concentrate while in the midst of traffic. Is this a correct statement: "How to train concentration on environment (when trafficing)?" |
37,931 | 159,927 | 76823_0 | How does one reflect the difference in meaning between 'I gave one to both of you' meaning you gave one to each of them, and 'I gave one to both of you' meaning you gave one item for the two to share? When, if ever, is the term 'the both of you' relevant? |
37,932 | 3,217 | 76823_0 | I've always used "inherent" and "intrinsic" interchangeably. Dictionary.com doesn't offer much help in distinguishing them. |
37,933 | 182,106 | 76823_0 | 2,060,700 in words. Which is correct. (A). Two million sixty thousand and seven hundred dollars OR (B). Two million sixty thousand seven hundred dollars OR (C). Two million and sixty thousand seven hundred dollsrs |
37,934 | 182,107 | 76823_0 | this is a poem by James. D. Corrothers: > To be a Negro on a day like this > Demands forgiveness. > Bruised with blow on blow, > Betrayed, like him whose woe dimmed eyes gave bliss, > Still must one succor those who brought one low, > To be a Negro on a day like this > > > To be a Negro on a day like this > Demands rar... |
37,935 | 132,918 | 76823_0 | Obviously a Case Study "has" (or should have!) a subject. But "has" seems a rather insipid verb. I'm looking for something more precise. So far I've come up with: "concerns", "features" and "treats", but I don't find any of these particularly evocative. Anyone got something that will hit the nail more squarely on the h... |
37,936 | 3,218 | 76823_0 | So I know that in modern English, the word "google" is considered a proper verb now. Can the same be said for the word "tweet" (i.e. to post a 140-char message to Twitter)? |
37,937 | 182,101 | 76823_0 | I know _shit_ is generally considered vulgar swearing in any context, while _crap_ (though it's normally used as a swear word) is often used and allowed in decent contexts. How did this happen, since they both refer to the same thing? |
37,938 | 84,592 | 76823_0 | I've been given the following question as a homework: > If _h_ is consistent, then _A* - CSCS_ will expand **at most as many** nodes > as _A* graph search_. English not being my native language, I'm kind of struggling to understand the true meaning of the text in bold in the context of this sentence. From what I unders... |
37,939 | 84,591 | 76823_0 | I am writing a speech about people having people in their lives who are catalysts for them to propel them to something positive in their lives. These people enable others to be something better than they had been before. Unfortunately, I cannot use the word "enabler" to describe those persons with one word, because the... |
37,940 | 84,596 | 76823_0 | Wiktionary says that _cypher_ comes from Old French _cyfre_ , which itself comes from Arabic. But _ph_ is usually a transliteration of Greek _phi_. So how does it get into a French word? |
37,941 | 568 | 76823_0 | At my business most of the employees use the word _inactivate_ frequently. Is this proper grammar? I've always used _deactivate_. |
37,942 | 137,274 | 76823_0 | > Tomorrow is [dedicated/intended/?] for the registration. The context is the first day at a university. Does either sound okay? If they both sound weird, what verb is a better fit? |
37,943 | 137,275 | 76823_0 | So I have a line from composition: 'But balloons had the disadvantage of having to go wherever the wind blew them, so that one never knew where they would come down.' And I was asked a question: 'What was the disadvantage of flying in a balloon?' I was instructed to answer in my own words and be only one sentence long.... |
37,944 | 124,695 | 76823_0 | I am confused with "paired ergative verbs" and "unpaired ergative verbs". 1. `He knocked the vase off the table and it broke.` Is [broke] in this sentence a paired ergative verb, because we can make the transitive counterpart as "He broke the vase"? 2. `He died with his boots on, like any good cowboy.` Then, is [died] ... |
37,945 | 560 | 76823_0 | For example, Bill Henry Gates, which of following is right? Bill H.Gates B.H. Gates H.G. Bill Gates Bill B. Gates H. Gates BHG HGB GHB |
37,946 | 83,061 | 76823_0 | I'm not a native speaker. I'd like to use three words (or phrases) to describe that somebody is quite familiar with, a little bit familiar with, or totally new to an English word. It will be used in an English-word test system. Anybody give me a clue? |
37,947 | 83,066 | 76823_0 | I looked it up on Google and in my English dictionary but cannot find out its meaning. The context is this page. > As usual the crime stories have split our judges so, as with last years > Fish-Knife Award, we have **joint winners** of the Crime section of the > Criminally-Short Short Histories Award. |
37,948 | 565 | 76823_0 | It is better to write this: > Only three people signed up: you, Jim, and I. than this: > Only three people signed up: you, me, and Jim. Because "I" is a subject and not an object. But what if I want the stress to come at the end, e.g.: > Only three people signed up: you, me and "thehulk66". Grammatically correct would ... |
37,949 | 14,706 | 76823_0 | When I was a kid I remember distinctly this lesson on how to pronounce a word. If there is only one consonant between two vowels like in the word "make" then the _e_ jumps over the _k_ and the _a_ yells its name "eh" instead of its sound "ah". For a word like "little" there are a bunch of consonants there so the _e_ ca... |
37,950 | 33,687 | 76823_0 | Sometimes I see the sentence > Have you done something, yet? Is it correct to write it that way? If not, what would be correct? If it is correct, why is it? |
37,951 | 14,702 | 76823_0 | What is the difference between "appropriate" and "suitable"? |
37,952 | 47,971 | 76823_0 | I saw a tow truck with a slogan running the length of the bed. > Were the "ones" to call What drew my attention was the past tense without an apostrophe, and the inappropriate use of quotation marks. But it made me wonder, what would the proper wording of one be? Is it, "We are the one to call", or "We are the one's to... |
37,953 | 47,977 | 76823_0 | In last night's GOP debate, candidate Mitt Romney implied that China tends to "flaunt the rules". Looking up "flaunt," it means to "show off." So what did he mean? |
37,954 | 76,702 | 76823_0 | What's the meaning of _take over_ in this context? Does it mean Mexico's population is becoming bigger than the US? > P1: World population doubled in just 36 years, that is f-king unreal. The > worst part is that the bulk of the reproducing population is 3rd world > countries and the lower dregs of society (look at poo... |
37,955 | 76,707 | 76823_0 | On a comment to one of my other questions on this site, a user said: > It’s much easier to answer questions like this when you specify where you've > come across the word. Is the use of the word _this_ correct in such case? I would be inclined to say “questions like _these_ ”, or if I wanted to use the singular form I ... |
37,956 | 13,956 | 76823_0 | Is the following use of _have_ and _behavior_ correct? > All programs have the expected behavior. |
37,957 | 5,523 | 76823_0 | We wanted to use this as a T-shirt quote, but I feel that "if winning isn't everything then why do they keep score" is wrong. The correct sentence should be "if winning isn't everything then why do they keep **a** score". However, a Google search shows that I may be wrong. Only one person agrees with my sentence. Is th... |
37,958 | 18,138 | 76823_0 | In his 1991 book, historian J.B. Russel writes: > with extraordinary few exceptions no educated person ... believed that the > earth was flat Should _extraordinary_ be an adverb, or could this sentence be interpreted as if there are few exceptions, and those are extraordinary? |
37,959 | 161,401 | 76823_0 | Granted, this looks french, I've seen this used and referenced in English. I see it used a lot with dog walking businesses or pet sitting companies, although I have no idea what it means. Google translates it to "pet au pair" in English (doesn't translate anything) and Googling the phrase only brings up more pet sittin... |
37,960 | 147,151 | 76823_0 | Is there a word that can be used in place of _concerned_ , but that doesn't imply that something is wrong, or that the individual is worried? For instance, the following sentence: > A **concerned** parent will ask a child what happened during school that > day. means that the parent is worrying about the child, and may... |
37,961 | 18,132 | 76823_0 | I have noticed that many terms in software come from American English, as the US was responsible for much software engineering terminology. I want to know how Britishers use these terms in these specific contexts. 1. How do Brits say "refactoring code" (which means to decompose code into more easily workable parts)? Do... |
37,962 | 72,932 | 76823_0 | As the title says, what is the opposite of "Jack of all trades master of none"? |
37,963 | 99,885 | 76823_0 | In a game of slot machines, can you call a payline you bet on "a wagered payline"? I am not sure if it is the payline that is wagered, or my money are wagered on (upon?) this payline. |
37,964 | 72,937 | 76823_0 | Listening to the recent film production of Macbeth with Patrick Stewart, I noticed that Duncan says: > Give me your hand. Conduct me to mine host. Obviously, it's in the text (Act 1, Scene 6). I'm curious as to whether in Shakespeare's time (and dialect) this would have been pronounced with an aspirated 'h', or whether... |
37,965 | 30,089 | 76823_0 | I've discovered a expression : to go cold turkey, meaning something like feeling bad because you have taken drugs and you need to take more. I wonder if another verb rather than go can be used instead, and if there are any other expressions meaning the same. I also wonder where this expression comes from. |
37,966 | 110,741 | 76823_0 | I know that pronouncing "t" as "d" is called a _flap t_ , but is there a name for pronouncing "nt" as "n" in some words, as is common in American English? Examples: * "Internet" is pronounced as "inner net". * "interesting" is pronounced as "inner resting". Is there an scientific name for this? |
37,967 | 31,351 | 76823_0 | Is there an English idiomatic expression to indicate a place which is very far away from the speaker's location? Something like > in the middle of nowhere but not necessarily implying that the place is isolated, just that it is far. EDIT: an example sentence could be > I saw a nice house for rent but it's not good for ... |
37,968 | 31,355 | 76823_0 | > Maybe he would help me with Deborah's pablum, take turns pushing the > wheelchair. It's good to have someone. > > That reminded me that I had someone -- or perhaps I was had. In any case, > Rita would want to know I would be late, [...] This is the first time I see a sentence like this. What tense is that _I was had_... |
37,969 | 31,354 | 76823_0 | There are many English words that could be used to refer to something innocent that also has a common slang meaning, such as _pussy, ass, bitch_ , etc. For convenience' sake, should we avoid using those words altogether in formal writing? Should we perhaps use synonyms or paraphrase them, instead of using the single wo... |
37,970 | 195,108 | 76823_0 | So and so is the most "bakiest" person I know! She's so good at baking! What word could feasibly replace "bakiest" which I obviously made up. :) |
37,971 | 47,354 | 76823_0 | Is the dash an acceptable punctuation in this sentence? > Dances, parties, luncheons -- all these should be part of your senior year. |
37,972 | 47,350 | 76823_0 | I work a lot with business applications and traditionally I've used the word "disapprove" as the counterpart to application approvals (e.g. disapprove leave application, disapprove waiver). But I've the sudden realization that in real life, the only times I've ever used the word "disapprove" is in the context of expres... |
37,973 | 15,076 | 76823_0 | What term expresses an increase of troops or other military units in a standoff between two armies, when no actual fighting has yet occurred? Specifically, I'm looking for something in the context of a naval battle. For land-based tactics, I've heard _massing of troops_ , but what is a better term for a conflict at sea... |
37,974 | 15,077 | 76823_0 | I came across the term "sex film actress" in the Op-Ed column The Disposable Woman. I could guess what the phrase meant, as "sex worker" is a new term for "prostitute", and therefore "sex film actress" would be the equivalent for "porn star". I checked if this term had been used before, and there were a smattering of u... |
37,975 | 15,075 | 76823_0 | For example: > 1. This is some type of mushroom. > > 2. This is some kind of mushroom. > > 3. There are different types of books > > 4. There are different kinds of books > > I think that there are all valid sentences but somehow I have the impression that a type is a bigger group than a kind. Is this correct? |
37,976 | 15,072 | 76823_0 | I am writing an academic thesis related to a specific topic (the actual topic is irrelevant, so let's just call it XXX). The thesis basically consists of: 1. pointing out a couple of problems in existing literature related to XXX, 2. methodology that according to my research can be used to lessen these problems, and 3.... |
37,977 | 6,541 | 76823_0 | I saw emails from English people with _Many Thanks_ as a signing off phrase. Is that proper usage? Or is it a phrase created by continental English speakers due to the influence of their native language? ( _Vielen Dank_ in German and _muchas gracias_ in Spanish translate to "many thanks".) I have seen several other cas... |
37,978 | 87,767 | 76823_0 | I have the following sentence in my dissertation: > The even-tempered STO basis for Mg shows nicely why the virial theorem > cannot be trusted as an error indicator. However, previously I had there: > ... nicely shows why the ... But I was told that the "nicely shows" word order is incorrect. So I googled around and fo... |
37,979 | 195,223 | 76823_0 | The sentence: I want to finish this game but wish it never ends. Also if possible can you explain what makes a sentence a paradox exactly ? |
37,980 | 110,216 | 76823_0 | Is there a word or phrase to express the concept of an action having the opposite effect of the expected outcome? For example, a drug taken to cure headaches that actually causes headaches, or an advertising campaign designed to deter smoking that leads to an increase in smoking. |
37,981 | 160,398 | 76823_0 | My company often comes up with product names such as "HatQuest" "DataParty" as a programmer I wish to make a generator for these types of names, How would I best find a list of words for things like "party" and "quest". I can't really use verbs since "DataSit" or "HatOpen" don't really work and nouns are inappropriate ... |
37,982 | 88,488 | 76823_0 | The two expressions from the title, “I wouldn't ever” and “I would never”, are very similar. But are they completely equivalent or do they bear any subtle differences? If so, how do they differ in meaning, usage, maybe emotional load? Or perhaps one of them feels "more natural" than the other? |
37,983 | 173,022 | 76823_0 | Sorry for another one word request or whatever but it isn't just one word I am looking for, and it also is a bit more of a challenge as I am not looking for a word that _best_ describes how to describe the act of placing value on an item using the English language, but yet a word or word combination that is most easily... |
37,984 | 88,485 | 76823_0 | What is the difference with using PT (Pacific Time) vs PDT (Pacific Daylight Time) or PST (Pacific Standard Time)? When you write the time, 2:00pm PT, would that be considered incorrect because it is not specific enough? |
37,985 | 39,109 | 76823_0 | I came across the line, _‘I’ve got my fist cocked if you still want to fuck with_ me’ in the following sentence of the article titled “A Different Kind of Texan” in August 29th New Yorker Magazine. I checked ‘cock one’s fist’ and ‘get one’s fist cocked’ on Google to find there was no entry of both phrases. I guess ‘get... |
37,986 | 168,041 | 76823_0 | When we can use _degree_? And also when we can use _level_? Are they similar or not? For example in this sentence > The way to tell a true unit from a degree of something is to look at the > zero point. Can I use _level_ instead of _degree_? |
37,987 | 18,244 | 76823_0 | I am watching the excellent documentary "Nobelity" by Turk Pipkin: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nobelity http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turk_Pipkin 4 minutes into the movie, there is a bit that I don't understand. Here is the transcript: > Do you ever get the feeling that everything really is broken? That no matter > who... |
37,988 | 12,705 | 76823_0 | Is there any single word that is used to indicate a person who reads the psychological aspect of people's handwritings (like what they believe and what type of people they are, etc.)? |
37,989 | 88,158 | 76823_0 | I can understand the causative form (quite less frequently, we simply say _causal verb_ ) with _make_ and _get_ but when used with _have/has_ , it sometimes makes me think differently. Of course, I can understand the construction like the following. * I had a barber cut my hair yesterday. In its passive form, it can be... |
37,990 | 144,237 | 76823_0 | Is it correct to write > Newcastle disease is economically significant because of the huge mortality > and morbidity associated with it. |
37,991 | 34,715 | 76823_0 | > It recurs every n days. I want to form a question to which the answer is 'n'. How can I form the question? |
37,992 | 154,659 | 76823_0 | Why do we sometimes pronounce t as /t/, whereas other times we pronounce it as /ʧ/ or /ʃ/? * t in town, * 'ʧ' in natural * 'ʃ' in hamartia/tertiary Is there any special rule for these? |
37,993 | 154,658 | 76823_0 | I was writing a report of my economic presentation. I had to mention that I chose three states for my studies in the introduction of the report. Since I can't use the active voice to mention this, which passive voice should I chose, passive of simple present or passive of present perfect? i.e 'are chosen' or 'have been... |
37,994 | 100,702 | 76823_0 | I'm assigned to read the book called _Life at the Bottom_ by Theodore Dalrymple, and I'm reading a quote in the book, but I don't really understand it. > “Such flattery is thus the death of aspiration, and lack of aspiration is, > of course, one of the causes of passivity.” What on earth does this quote mean? I'm liter... |
37,995 | 120,055 | 76823_0 | > It was established on a _rocky_ foundation. Does it mean _steady_ or _shaky_? |
37,996 | 153,600 | 76823_0 | Is there a particular word for a joke or a humorous story which has a moral to it? In a way, something that is similar to a fable, but with the humour implied. |
37,997 | 64,704 | 76823_0 | I was reading _The Invisible Man_ , here's the sentence: > The stranger did not go to church, and indeed made no difference between > Sunday and the irreligious days, even in costume. What does _even in costume_ mean here? I don't quite get it, since both Sunday and irreligious days are _days_ , unlike _costume_ which ... |
37,998 | 154,650 | 76823_0 | This is a bit weird, but the word `business` reads like `busy-ness`, but it sounds like `biz-ness`. * Why is that? * What happened to the `i`? |
37,999 | 100,704 | 76823_0 | Also seen as "noobie", "n00b", etc. Etymonline gives an origin by 1969, possibly in the military. Is there a more definite origin anywhere? I know it is was also common on the Usenet, but of course any such use must have been post-1979 when Usenet was invented. I know that the suffix "-bie" (as in freebie, etc.) is not... |
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