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英文字典中文字典相关资料:


  • English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Q A for linguists, etymologists, and serious English language enthusiasts
  • Correct abbreviation of engineer - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    What is the correct abbreviation of engineer? In my organization, some of my colleagues use Eng and some use Engr
  • pronunciation - Any rule for pronouncing “e”? - English Language . . .
    I hear three different sounds for the letter e in precious, bean, and Peru Is there a rule that covers the different pronunciations that a written letter e can represent in speech?
  • synonyms - Renumeration vs Remuneration (reimbursed financially), which . . .
    According to the OED renumeration remuneration are interchangeable So too are the associated verbs - renumerate remunerate However, some commentators have strong feelings about renumeration being used with its first-cited meaning (i e remuneration, see below) " to be avoided at all costs is the metathesized form renumeration " (R W Burchfield New Fowler's Mod Eng Usage (1996) 666
  • Should I use got or gotten in the following sentence?
    This article (emphasis mine) would be hard to improve on: As past participles of get, got and gotten both date back to Middle English The form gotten is not used in British English but is very common in North American English, though even there it is often regarded as non-standard In North American English, got and gotten are not identical in use Gotten usually implies the [punctive act
  • 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
  • phonetics - English words ending with -enk -eng - English Language . . .
    3 Mostly because -eng, -enk didn’t survive Middle English We don’t have native words in -eng, -enk because of a regular sound-change that any such words underwent in their evolution from Old English to Middle English to Modern English For example, Old English had a verb lengen meaning to lengthen (transitively) or to linger (intransitively)
  • Did English ever have a formal version of you?
    Yes it did, and the formal version was (drumroll, please ) you In Early Modern English, thou was the singular and you was the plural Plural you came to be used as a polite form of address (similar to the French vous, which is also used for the plural), but over time this polite form became more and more common, eventually displacing the singular thou altogether This explains a
  • Why does corn mean maize in American English?
    In British English, "corn" can mean any type of "grain": increasingly not really true today; the en-US usage meaning "maize" is increasingly the meaning (at least without context suggesting the "locally common cereal crop" to paraphrase my dictionary) I assume this is both the availability of sweetcorn and popcorn in addition to the usual cultural invasion factor
  • Was man a gender-neutral word in common usage at some point?
    A xxii) in R Morris Old Eng Homilies (1868) 1st Ser 223 He com þa anedren hiwe toðam twam mannum, erest toðan wife But the usage of "man" and "men" to refer to a generic human or humans in general, irrespective of gender, continued well into the 20th century





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