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  1. etymology - What is the origin of "stat"? - English Language & Usage ...

    May 17, 2011 · The word stat is an abbreviation of the Latin word statim, which has the meaning "instantly/immediately". This usage was then generalized beyond the domain of prescriptions to refer …

  2. "Status" vs. "state" - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    Feb 17, 2011 · Can anyone explain what the difference between status and state is when I talk about the condition or situation of an object? Here's what I got from Longman English Dictionary. status: a situati...

  3. When should ‘state’ be capitalised? - English Language & Usage ...

    Oct 13, 2015 · There are no special rules for capitalizing the word "state" in ordinary, non-technical English. It should be capitalized when at the start of a sentence, or when it is part of a proper noun. …

  4. Is it a City, Province, State or a District? And How to Properly ...

    Oct 21, 2017 · I kind of started getting a blurry image of what you mean, but still I have 2 more question, if you may! What shall I write in the (District/ county/ province/ state) field in my mailing address. …

  5. What is the origin of the suffixes "statin" and "medin"?

    Apr 10, 2016 · The use of -stat as a suffix usually means that it will make something come to rest, to stop, to stand still. Hemo stasis is the act of stopping bleeding. A tool to clamp a blood vessel is …

  6. dictionaries - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    Aug 22, 2018 · I have found only this statistic: Words by Length Words by First and Second Letter But I want to find words count which start by z and x (or any other letter) Does anybody know such stat?

  7. prepositions - Should we use "opinion of" or "opinion on"? - English ...

    In British English you might use 'of' for a specific thing, eg. a book or person, and 'on' for a broad topic, eg. 'your opinion on string theory'. But it's not a very strong rule, I wouldn't feel that either was wrong. …

  8. How did "phenomenal" come to mean "extraordinary"?

    Nov 28, 2023 · Phenomenal nowadays is primarily used in common discourse to mean extraordinary, although it has a now-rarer secondary meaning which I suspect was originally its primary meaning: a. …

  9. What's the word for Unnecessary Complexity

    Jul 27, 2016 · Unparsimonious. Questions which lack results of research are out of scope. Writing advice requests are out of scope. Questions that invite many equally valid answers are out of scope. …

  10. grammaticality - target or targets or target's - English Language ...

    Mar 13, 2018 · You will want to use "target's" because the "'s" indicates that it is a possessive noun. For example: "The target's attack power." "The cat's meow." "The dog's blue collar." "My aunt's …