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  • How did “acker” come to mean friend in West Country English?
    'Acker' in the wake of Mr Acker Bilk There is very little to go on in trying to trace the origin of acker in the sense of "friend or mate" before the emergence of " [Mr ] Acker Bilk and His Paramount Jazz Band," which began to receive frequent mentions in Google search results in 1960
  • Where does the word jacked come from? (sports)
    According to the neologism database from The Rice University: Jacked: Etymology : Comes from the Modern English verb "jack", as in to "hoist,raise" In the late 1990's, the suffix "-ed" was added to the end of the word and it became an adjective to describe massive amounts of strength According to Green’s Dictionary of Slang it is from US campus slang: Jacked (US campus) muscular, well
  • etymology - Why did English borrow the French word rendezvous with . . .
    Wiktionary has: << ron-day-voo: Eye dialect spelling of rendezvous [noun and verb] >> So 'Why did English borrow the French word "rendezvous" with its original spelling and silent letters, while many French loanwords are anglicized?' perhaps needs tweaking The etymology of this and related loanwords since their appearance in the English lexicon, and what precisely is meant by 'English' in
  • Why is t sometimes pronounced like d in American English?
    First two questions: The pronunciation of some American English consonants can be quite different from British English, in particular for R and T A t in the middle of a word can be pronunced as a soft d in American English (think of bottle, cattle, etc ) See here, for example, for examples of this Third question: Why it does happen for Italy and not for Italian is clearly a matter of stress
  • Why is “bloody” considered offensive in the UK but not in the US?
    Why is the word bloody considered offensive in Britain — where it is used as an adjectival expletive — but not so in the US?
  • The meaning and the origins of everythings gone pear-shaped.
    I've recently heard this phrase spoken twice on a British television show, and I assume it means something along the lines of, "everything's fallen apart," generally meaning, things are bad right n
  • word choice - What is the difference between thats odd, thats . . .
    There isn't a lot of difference between them - they can be used almost interchangeably To the extent that there is a difference (and anyone pays attention to the fine gradations in the terms), then: "That's odd" indicates the least surprise "That's strange" indicates a bit more surprise "That's weird" indicates more puzzlement and disbelief None of them expresses outright disbelief in
  • capitalization - Which words in a title should be capitalized . . .
    Are there any concrete rules that say which words (parts of speech) in a title should start with a capital letter? What would be a correct capitalization for the title of this question?
  • word choice - When to use If I was vs. If I were? - English . . .
    SYNOPSIS: Sometimes it must be “if I was”, but at other times it can be “if I were” — and for some speakers in those cases, perhaps even must be “if I were” in their idiolect
  • Is the phrase “nitty-gritty” racist? - English Language Usage . . .
    A BBC article, dated 15 May 2002, asserts the expression nitty-gritty is banned from British politics (and also by police services) due to its supposedly disagreeable origin The emphasis in bold i





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