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  • Whats the term word for a legal case without merit?
    There is a legal term "barratry" which means (in one sense) "the persistent incitement of litigation" (translated: filing multiple frivolous lawsuits), and is a legal basis for filing a counter-suit in many jurisdictions
  • Should I put a comma before the last item in a list?
    Should I put a comma before the last item in a list? I would like crackers, cheese and some soda I would like crackers, cheese, and some soda
  • etymology - Origin of the phrase to have no truck with - English . . .
    This phrase quot;to have no truck with quot; has bothered me ever since I stumbled upon it, the reason being it makes no logical sense whatsoever even remotely if you go by the lexical meaning of
  • grammar - apostrophes : girls and boys team - English Language . . .
    Punctuation is not grammar and doesn't follow grammatical rules It's arbitrary, and especially in the case of apostrophes, chaotic The simplest and most likely solution is to omit all apostrophes (which don't convey any information, or questions like this wouldn't be asked) and rely on syntax to distinguish the girls teams, and the boys teams, from the girls and boys team If necessary, from
  • Since when has J been sounding like [dʒ] and no longer Y
    The letter J in English has always been pronounced the same way since it was introduced It replaced the Old English letters cg which had the same sound: In English, j most commonly represents the affricate dʒ In Old English the phoneme dʒ was represented orthographically with cg and cȝ Under the influence of Old French, which had a similar phoneme deriving from Latin j , English
  • pronouns - When to use “that” and when to use “which”, especially in . . .
    When is it appropriate to use that as opposed to which with relative clauses?
  • Why don’t Americans say “faucet water” instead of “tap water”?
    Faucet and tap are synonymous, and yet in the UK the former is very rarely used in speech–unless referring to American dialects–and in literature The water from a tap is commonly called "tap water", so why isn't water from a faucet (a grammatical noun phrase) also called "faucet water"? Interestingly, according to AmEng Ngrams, the NP "water from the tap" appears much less poplar than
  • Useage of This and That at the beginning of the sentence
    Ryan, I did it to make a point Didn't you notice there were four "that"s in the sentence? In third sentence I used the pronoun "this" but it refers to "rule", which doesn't precede it in this case, but is the closest noun A noun can be unspoken, but the reason we have rules about pronouns and antecedents is to make the language less, not more confusing "That", used as the first word of a
  • Is scurryfunge a new word? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    The OED does have an entry for the word as 'scurrifunge' (cross-referencing the form 'scurryfunge') The rather amusing etymology given is A word of jocular formation, used in various senses with little or no discoverable connection The sense you give is, approximately, shown as "to scrub, scour" (transitive), without source quotes Another sense ("to wriggle about") appears as early as 1777
  • Where does the phrase crazy like a fox originate?
    Meaning and early instances of the idiom Christine Ammer, The American Heritage Dictionary of Idioms (1997) has this entry for "crazy like a fox": crazy like a fox Seemingly foolish but actually very shrewd and cunning [Example omitted ] This usage gained currency when humorist S J Perelman used it as the title of a book (1944) {Early 1900s} The Library of Congress's Chronicling America





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