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felled    音标拼音: [f'ɛld]


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  • Fall, fell, felled - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    causative: fell, felled, has be felled, as opposed to intransitive: fall, fell, has fallen However, felling a dynasty or regime, or anything except a man, animal, or tree, is pretty rare today; OED 1 was already marking it as obsolete in 1895 Topple (in the transitive use) is more common EDIT -- taking a healthy bite of my words
  • word choice - Is it falling or felling? - English Language Usage . . .
    fell verb 1 Cut down (a tree) ‘33 million trees are felled each day’ 1 1 Knock down ‘Whitlock felled him with one punch’ - ODO fall verb 4 (no object, with adverbial) Be captured or defeated ‘their mountain strongholds fell to enemy attack’ - ODO Use felling if you're focusing on (or alluding to) the reason or agent for the fall
  • meaning - Difference between logs, timber, and lumber - English . . .
    Logs are the piece of a felled tree, usually the size of a large branch (could even be a large branch) up to a whole section of a trunk, and generally just a rough piece of wood that you could use either as-is (such as in building a log cabin), for use in small-to-medium projects, or to be used as firewood Not generally to be found in a
  • What is the difference between fell over and fell on in nuance?
    The different is not a nuance These are two different verbs to fall (intransitive) - This is the verb with the most general meaning It means that the subject descends u
  • grammaticality - Direct Object. Is there a rule? - English Language . . .
    "For several days" is an adverbial phrase describing the manner in which he said it Same thing here: "a great distance" is not what was "felled", it was how the thing fell By the way, "fell" can also be a transitive verb, though the usage is not common You can say, "He felled a tree", meaning that he cut a tree down and made it fall
  • grammaticality - Why can’t you say “I fell the stairs”? - English . . .
    As in "I felled a tree " "Fell" is also the past tense of "fall " But even in this context, you can't talk about "falling" the stairs You need a preposition, to fall down the stairs, or even to fall from the stairs
  • fall prey to or fall a prey to - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    Stack Exchange Network Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q A communities including Stack Overflow, the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers
  • Were Fell and Fel both correct spellings?
    Both are attested Before Modern English, there were really no overarching prescriptivist entities, so the concept of "correct" spellings didn't exist
  • meaning - Origin of the idiom falling off the wagon - English . . .
    From The Encyclopedia of Word and Phrase Origins, by Robert Hendrickson: The original version of this expression, 'on the water wagon' or 'water cart,' which isn't heard anymore, best explains the phrase
  • What is the origin of the phrase grease the skids?
    But the 1875, 1882, and 1884 examples all involve skids used for moving felled trees; moreover, all three are set in Washington state or in British Columbia, right across the border from Washington Subsequent nineteenth-century literal instances of "grease the skids" skew heavily toward lumber and timber contexts





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