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  • Should I say 3 half days or 3 half-days or 3 half-day?
    Should I say "3 half days" or "3 half-days" or "3 half-day"? I mean I want to refer to, for example, the a m of Monday, the p m of Wednesday, and the a m of Friday, together
  • orthography - run-down versus rundown - English Language Usage . . .
    In The Complete Poems of Anna Akhmatova by Judith Hemschemeyer, we read: In this everyday gray dress, On rundown heels I thought that quot;rundown quot; was a substantive and quot;run-down q
  • Proper Timezone Acronym Usage - PT vs PDT or PST
    What is the difference between PT (Pacific Time), PDT (Pacific Daylight Time), and PST (Pacific Standard Time)? Also, is the time format quot;2:00pm PT quot; unambiguous?
  • Is receival a valid word for the act of receiving something?
    In the course of reviewing a standard operating procedure, I came across the subheading: " Receival, Costing and Charging of Work " I immediately began to doubt whether the word "receival" was a legitimate equivalent to the noun "receipt", as in: receipt of samples My gut feeling is that use of "receival" in place of the word "receipt", as above, is either outmoded archaic, or entirely
  • Man is to womanizer as woman is to what?
    Man-eater and vamp are a little bit "slangy" compared to seductress - a woman who seduces someone, esp one who entices a man into sexual activity Per Neil's comment to the question itself, bitch isn't really relevant to the meanings involved here Per comments discussion below, it's probably impossible to come up with a "feminine version of womanizer " that only switches the gender without
  • Is there a difference between holiday and vacation?
    I think there is a difference in usage among countries I know that many (native German-speaking) Swiss where I used to work would say they are going "on holiday" for several weeks I never heard that expression from Americans
  • What is the origin of the phrase great minds think alike?
    @phoog Sure, I agree it is a possibility Of course the longer version being an adaptation of the shorter is also possible Wikitionary suggests that "fools seldom differ" is usually a comeback of sorts I E One guy says "great minds think alike" and another (probably the other agreeing party) says "more like fools seldom differ "
  • grammaticality - Whether or not vs. whether - English Language . . .
    As Henry Higgins observed in Pygmallion, the best grammarians are often those who learned English in school as immigrants My parents, who were first-generation Americans in the early 20th century, learned English grammar in NYC public schools meticulously They insisted "whether or not" is proper usage, period Over time, language evolves or erodes and the rules change, which really means
  • abbreviations - Should I write PhD or Ph. D. ? - English Language . . .
    Question pretty self-explanatory Should the abbreviation of the Latin term philosophiae doctor be written as PhD (no periods) or Ph D (with periods)?
  • pronunciation - Difference between the ear and the year - English . . .
    As pointed out in the answer to the question linked to in your original question on Linguistics, the glottal stop is non-mandatory and unreliable – it may or may not be there for any given speaker in any given utterance Additionally, the standard pronunciation of the in most variants of English is ðə before consonants (‘the year’) and ði before vowels (‘the ear’); the main





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