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  • Regarding Re: ; what is the correct usage in an email subject line?
    I want to know what is the recommended way to use Re: in the subject line of an email I use Re: in the subject line as a shortform of 'in regards to' Whenever I have used Re:, people have told me
  • writing - What the #$@ %*! is that called? - English Language Usage . . .
    These have also been called obscenicons Several links on Language Log offer an in-depth look at their usage More on the early days of obscenicons Obscenicons a century ago CALL ME UNPRONOUNCEABLE The "word" represented by the symbols could be pronounced bleep: So people came up with a small set of conventional euphemistic readings for <expletive suppressed>: "bleep", "bleeping", "bleepity
  • In a tournament, do I get a by, a bye, or a buy? [closed]
    If there are an odd number of competitors at any stage of a single-elimination tournament, one player is excused from play and continues on as if he had defeated his (nonexistent) opponent This is
  • Why is pineapple in English but ananas in all other languages?
    Never believe everything you read on the internet That list is hand-picked in order to try to prove a point While it's true that most European languages use some variant of "ananas", it is far from the truth to claim that English is the only one to use "pineapple", or that there is not a lot of variation in the terms that are used Here is an incomplete list I compiled from Google Translate
  • Is guy gender-neutral? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    The plural "guys" definitely is, at least here in San Francisco — I'm often hearing all-girl companies here being greeted with 'Hi guys, how are you doing?' How about the singular guy? Is it
  • What does off you go mean? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    I came across the phrase off you go which has been frequently used in many movies Especially, the movie John Carter impressed me with this phrase What does it mean in different scenarios cases?
  • Is there a word for people who directly report to me in office?
    Report is the common word used in this context See the 4th definition under noun, in OLD: Report An employee who reports to another employee Although they are your subordinates by your own description, the word subordinate carries with it the very clear sense that these people are lower in the company hierarchy than you It would usually be used if there was a need to put emphasis on that
  • etymology - Origin of cream of the crop - English Language Usage . . .
    Where does the saying cream of the crop come from? I know it means the best of the lot but I couldn't find anything on how it came to be
  • Is incorrect capitalization considered a spelling error?
    Is incorrect capitalization, such as the lowercase "i" in [Can] i [this sic] have an if statement within a dialog box code? considered a spelling mistake, or some other type of error?
  • Origin of I can haz? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    I'm sure there is a good history, as it were, of the lolcats thing "I can haz " is something that the cats in these pictures often say As to the strange grammar, that's the point, that kittens aren't particularly educated yet in English (yet?) and so have terrible grammar (they can't read very well either)





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