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  1. transatlantic differences - What's a word for a small rural property ...

    Mar 13, 2026 · If by any chance any of you are Portuguese speakers, I am looking for a word that would be an equivalent to the Brazilian Portuguese term chácara. In this kind of rural property, no cattle are …

  2. "Filter by" or "filter according to"? - English Language & Usage Stack ...

    Feb 20, 2018 · ie. Filtering a list of events by venue, or filtering a list of events according to the venue Thank you. EDIT: I always used by as in a direct translation from French filtrer par; according to …

  3. "Compared with" vs "Compared to"—which is used when?

    Apr 12, 2011 · From Strunk and White: To compare to is to point out or imply resemblances between objects regarded as essentially of a different order; To compare with is mainly to point out differences …

  4. An appropriate term for the 'contamination' of a language

    Mar 12, 2015 · La principale fonction de l’Académie sera de travailler, avec tout le soin et toute la diligence possibles, à donner des règles certaines à notre langue et à la rendre pure, éloquente et …

  5. Who coined the term "Holocaust" to refer to the Nazi "final solution ...

    Mar 5, 2013 · Before World War II the word "holocaust" referred most often to a huge inferno. Who first used the term to describe the Nazi murder of 6 million Jews? When and where?

  6. What is the proper contraction for “should not have”

    May 4, 2019 · The second apostrophe is generally left out for aesthetic reasons, but yes, that’s it. Or shouldna If you prefer. Whether it’s ‘proper English’ depends entirely on whose definition of what’s …

  7. Where did "You know what thought did!" come from?

    Oct 28, 2024 · This from Never Play Leapfrog with a Unicorn - Page 93 is a typical citation from Google Books: “You know what thought did don'tcha? He shit himself and thought someone else did it,” she …

  8. american english - "I second that motion" or "I second that notion ...

    Sep 27, 2013 · The correct phrase is "second that motion". It originates from parliamentary procedure and is commonly used in meetings of all kinds of clubs and organizations. Wikipedia defines second …

  9. Why does "Mickey Mouse Operation" refer to a poorly run company?

    A phrase I commonly hear (and use myself) when a company (or individual, in some cases) does something that seems foolish or not planned is to ask What kind of Mickey Mouse operation are you …

  10. meaning - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    Feb 19, 2022 · Here's an entertaining rant on the subject - it does seem to show a desire to abstract language from reality. Possibly it's less damaging to their career for a politician to say "negative …