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  • Calm, cool and collective vs calm, cool and collected
    What is the difference between calm, cool and collective and calm, cool and collected? What is the meaning of collective or collected when used in this way? I checked the dictionary but still do
  • history - Prior to the 20th century, what was the noun for an . . .
    Japanese B1 A native of Japan 1604 E Grimeston tr J de Acosta Nat Morall Hist Indies A Iapponois reported this after hee was christened Javanese B1 A native of Java (formerly with plural Javaneses) 1704 tr P Baldæus Descr Ceylon in A Churchill J Churchill Coll Voy III The Javaneses and Mardykers
  • Origin of to be into [someone] for [a sum of money]
    Partridge Partridge's A Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English (2002) says: into (a person) for (a sum of money), be To owe a person so-much, to have let him down for a stated amount: Can, coll : late C 19-20 John Bearnes, Gateway, 1932, He's into me for ninety dollars, and I can't get a cent out of him ' Where Can coll is Canadian colloquial The 2007 edition more simply says
  • What is the relationship name of my sibling-in-laws sibling to me?
    For example: I have a sister named Charlotte Charlotte is married to Martin Martin has a brother named William Martin is my brother-in-law, but what is William to me?
  • What is the origin of giving [it] the old college try?
    What is the origin of giving [it] the old college try? In particular, is it referencing an old ritual that might have percolated amongst alumni of the old and prestigious New England colleges
  • What is the etymology of squiffy? - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    and: swipey (Not very) tipsy: coll [oquial]: 1844, Dickens, 'He's only a little swipey, you know ' Neveral gen [eral] and, by 1900, ob [solete] Swipes was a late-18th-century and 19th-century slang term for beer I first heard the term in the 1960s, thanks to the invaluable (to a citizen of the United States) vinyl recordings of Beyond the
  • Origin of current slang usage of the word sick to mean great?
    This question ought to be reopened, because the current answers are basically wrong Whether or not other usage in youth culture pre-dates it, sick became slang for pretty much the opposite of what it traditionally means in the late '90s in South London, with predominantly black kids into the 'grime' music scene, which in turn spawned the 'dubstep' music scene Dubstep has since become popular
  • etymology - What is the origin of settle your hash? - English . . .
    an early occurrence is from Olympic Games by Isaac Cruikshank: In settle (someone’s) hash, to subdue, silence, defeat; kill: s >, in C 20, coll An early occurrence is in Isaac Cruikshank, Olympic Games, 16 June 1803 (thanks to Mrs M D George) it's also in Americanisms: The English of the New World (1872) by M (Maximilian) Schele de Vere - here's an image: from hash: 1657, "to hack, chop
  • Is teh an English word? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    I remember being told that "teh" (a common misspelling of "the") is actually a proper (though very old and no longer in common usage) English word Teh was used as an example that if every single
  • The opposite of a paean - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    The most recent example in the OED is from 1960, R Eberhart, Coll Poems 1930–60, p 14: "The perfect lament, and threne of sorrow's throat" As an adjective, you've got "threnetic" which might apply nicely to the dystopia you're writing about Fairly obscure, it has to be said, but that's not necessarily a bad thing





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