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  • Whats the difference between Mediary and Intermediary?
    The closest word in English to "mediary" is "mediator", and both Mediator and intermediary have nearly identical meanings, a third person who acts in negotiations between two other parties
  • adjectives - What is the difference between intermediate and . . .
    Oxford Learner’s Dictionaries, broadly backed up by Google Books, does not agree with you: this case is intermediate is fine; this case is intermediary is not Merriam-Webster gives intermediate as a synonym for intermediary, but Oxford Learner’s does not: it defines intermediary as go between only: 1 a person or an organization that helps other people or organizations to make an agreement
  • What words describe the feeling of proving someone wrong?
    I am looking for words to describe the feeling of when you prove someone wrong For example Person A says person B can't do something Out of spite Person B does said thing Person B then feels____
  • What does the expression Word. mean? [duplicate]
    As @Robusto suggest in his comment, the term word, when used as US slang, means well said said in a agreement can be used as a greeting, hey whats up Urban Dictionary Wordnik suggests that it is a shortening of word up interj An abbreviated form of word up; a statement of the acknowledgment of fact with a hint of nonchalant approval Wikipedia suggests word up's origin is found in African
  • Is the expression Never Meet Your Heroes an adage?
    @Sedat Kapanoglu The sentiment is certainly old; in fact, it isn't so very different in tendency from the notion of an idol with " feet of clay " In any event, Proust was not writing in English, and what the original poster of this question was looking for was the earliest instance of the specific wording "Never meet your heroes " My sense is that even if Proust's French take on the truism
  • Etymology of the word skulduggery? - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    3 Three Etymologies William Sayers (" Skulduggery: Etymology", 2019, ANQ: A Quarterly Journal of Short Articles, Notes and Reviews): A plausible etymology is offered below, but must be put under the rubrics of the well-known influence of Old Norse speech on that of medieval Scotland (both Gaelic and Scots) and the less well-recognized social, political, and linguistic relations between
  • Man is to womanizer as woman is to what?
    What's the feminine version of womanizer? Your title and question are a bit contradictory Reading the title, I inferred that the question was a man womanizes a female so what do you call a female that womanizes a male However, the question implies what is a woman that womanizes; I wasn't aware that womanizing was gender specific As opposed to (what the title led me to believe the question
  • american english - Pronunciation of aunt in the US - English Language . . .
    The IPA transcriptions are US ænt and UK ant One can use a macro ā or colon a: for the UK one, depending on transcription habits, but vowel length isn't phonemic in any dialect of English, so a simple a will do I do think that questions and answers about pronunciation in a written medium should try to use standard English phonemic symbols Otherwise, how do we avoid confusion?
  • Adaption vs adaptation [closed] - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    The Shorter OED doesn't give adaption, as @ig0774 says It'll be in the Complete, though, because it's definitely a valid word But I certainly agree with others, adaptation is to be preferred Exactly the same has happened with adoption and adoptation, except in that case the shorter word became the standard form So far as I'm concerned these are (rare) examples of true synonyms
  • business up front, party in the back origin?
    I always assumed the phrase was an allusion to Prohibition-era speakeasies, which presented the appearance of a normal place of business in the part of the building facing the street, but maintained one or more secret rooms in the back for liquor, gaming, or other illicit activities Presumably the mullet acquired this description because the front part of the haircut was (in its original era





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