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  • What does Chap when it describes a person? [closed]
    However, 'chap' here is informal, just a less highbrow remote replacement for 'person', and (from the context, which hints at say a Bertie-Wooster-like association) having a (dated) British upper-class connection
  • Whats the difference between bloke, chap and lad?
    chap — " (British) fellow Origin of chap: chapman" lad — "a male person of any age between early boyhood and maturity" So, it seems, that lad can be related only to a young person While chap and bloke to any male person My British fellow said: Chap is more delicate; bloke is rougher a bit Chap is posh, bloke is common
  • Feminine Forms for chaps and blokes [duplicate]
    (Source: Can a woman be a chap?, Patricia T O’Conner and Stewart Kellerman, Grammarphobia, 15 May 2019) Increasingly there is criticism of using potentially gendered terms such as "guys"; you can argue if they are gendered, but there is still the risk of excluding women or upsetting people
  • Is there a standard symbol for denoting a chapter in a citation?
    No The standard abbreviations are Ch and Chap …or at least, if there is such a symbol, Unicode doesn’t know about it yet — and Unicode is pretty comprehensive, including characters as diverse as the inverted interrobang ⸘, biohazard sign ☣, and snowman ☃, not to mention the Shavian alphabet and much, much, much more
  • meaning - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    1993 A Habens in M Bradbury A Motion New Writing 2 247 It's a rum do if a chap isn't allowed to remember what he remembers The adjective rum gives rise to may composites e g rum-looking, rum-sounding etc
  • What exactly does tally ho mean? - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    @MichaelOwenSartin: To add to the wikipedia article "tally-ho" comes French taïaut or tayaut evolved from Middle French ta-ho formed from two onomatopœic words: ta that was the cry to stimulate the animals and ho a rallying cry It was used in foxhunting to signal the beast, and also in classical French to expose someone to public condemnation
  • The earliest instance is 1914 “Are you kidding me?”
    Punch (1879): Tommy swore he was kidding me proper— me, Charlie! I like the idear But two 'ours of continual bellows do make a chap dizzy and queer George Van Hare (1888): I hardly knew how to take it; I wondered if they were kidding me, but I found after it was really genuine The Book Buyer (1895–96):
  • expressions - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    The adjective "grim" was a later, emphatic addition: OED P8 (b)b colloquial Also like grim death Frequently with to hold on, to hang on, etc : with great determination or tenacity Originally with allusion to death personified; cf sense 1c (below) 1786 R Burns Poems 25 Then Burnewin comes on like Death, At ev'ry chap 1804 Lit Mag Amer Reg June 178 1 Some one, in order to
  • How did muggins come into use? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    We ["Ethiopian serenaders"] sometimes have a greenhorn wants to go out pitching with us—a mug we calls them ; and there's a chap of the name of 'Sparrow-back', as we called him, because he always wore a bob-tailed coat, and was a rare swell ; and he wanted to go out with us, and we told him that he must have his head shaved first, and Tom
  • etymology - Origin of the term red cent - English Language Usage . . .
    Does anyone have any insight into the actual origin of the term red cent? I've heard several timelines and possible origins, including cardboard 1 10-of-a-penny coins early in the 20th century, the





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