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  1. Origin of "Bedazzle" - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    4 Bedazzle means to dazzle intensely. The prefix be.. has a long usage in English and is of Teutonic origin. The OED carries a long article on the subject and supplies countless words which can be so …

  2. meaning - How does the "be-" prefix change the words to which it is ...

    May 19, 2011 · to bedazzle somebody => to make him confused (see also bewilder) These ones are slightly more difficult: to behold: the original meaning of to hold (OE healdan, German halten) is to …

  3. Is there a category name for verbs beginning with 'be-'? Is 'be-' a ...

    Oct 18, 2016 · The same post explains: The prefix be- can act as an intensifier, indicating something is thoroughly or excessively done, as in bewitch, bewilder, bedazzle. It can show a verb is affecting or …

  4. Origin of and why "knock" the socks off? - English Language & Usage ...

    Oct 7, 2015 · The Link shows what it means and how it originated: Overwhelm, bedazzle, or amaze someone, as in The young pianist knocked the socks off of the judges, or That display will knock …

  5. Word/phrase for seeing something for the first time and being impressed

    May 1, 2015 · Note: The meaning in the Vietnamese phrase is mostly for t he first thing you see. It may be something special to the person, it may be not. But it is the first that this person see. The thing …

  6. Is it CoViD? Or COVID? Covid? How should the word be spelled?

    Mar 24, 2020 · Official nomenclature and journalistic practice A recent item by Elisabeth Ribbans, " COVID or Covid? The comfort of pedantry at a time of national crisis," in The Guardian (April 19, …

  7. Where does this proverb come from? “If you want to go fast, go alone ...

    Apr 18, 2023 · I am attempting to find the origin or source of this proverb: “If you want to go fast, go alone, if you want to go far, go together” Most sources say that this is a translation of an African prov...

  8. word choice - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    Jun 15, 2025 · In formal and academic writing, I often encounter both phrases: “The study is concerned with the effects of climate change.” “The researchers are concerned about the rise in sea levels.” At first

  9. Why do so many people born and raised in South Carolina have no ...

    Jul 24, 2025 · Everyone has an accent. Do you mean that many from South Carolina have an accent almost indistinguishable from a Midwestern accent? Or perhaps from the so-called "American neutral …

  10. meaning - Is "rewardist" a real word/profession? - English Language ...

    Mar 7, 2024 · There's a new TV show called Tracker about a man who goes around the country helping people find missing loved ones. Rather than describing himself as a private investigator, he says he's …