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waling    
横撑; 水平木; 支横档; 支腰梁

横撑; 水平木; 支横档; 支腰梁


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  • Waling vs wailing vs whaling upon - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    There's a saying I hear used which I've spelled as ldquo;wailing upon rdquo;, implying someone besetting someone else to such an extent they are overwhelming that person I mostly hear it used in
  • expressions - Where does dead man walking come from? - English . . .
    The recent epithet used by George Osborne "dead woman walking" is a clear reference to the more common expression: Dead man walking whose original meaning is: (US) a condemned man walking fr
  • origin of gingerly - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    For years I thought gingerly meant "with spirit or liveliness," I suppose because "spirit and liveliness" define the noun ginger But no; gingerly means "cautiously or carefully " How did it take
  • word choice - Walk the walk vs. talk the talk vs. walk the talk . . .
    Normally the idiom is as follows: He walks the walk and talks the talk Should it not be "he walks the talk", meaning "he does what he says"?
  • What is the origin of “putting yourself in someone else’s shoes”?
    I'm not sure philosophical arguments about the impossibility of free will in a deterministic neurochemical system are strictly on topic here You might be better off directing those questions to a dedicated stack exchange site, if there is one, or to a suitable subreddit, or to a semi-comatose stranger at the end of a party, as is traditional
  • single word requests - Is there a verb for walking with joy . . .
    I was going to say that I doubted there were single words to denote walking while being in particular moods, but then I thought that there were words which might fit that description for negative moods, trudge, schlep or drag for example So I don't have any suggestions other than to look for antonyms of those Is there a particular reason you don't want to just add 'joyfully' to 'walk' or to
  • What are the words to express sobbing and crying sound?
    Google doesn't help much What are the sounds (written in words) that people usually use to express their crying sobbing emotions such as in chat, social network? For example if I say, "I am sad [
  • Someone who just thinks they know what theyre talking about
    talking head and or pundit Ideally the media would only allow people who actually do know what they're talking about to occupy the airwaves, but in reality no such filter exists
  • Etymology of banjax - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Here's what " banjax " means - Banjax verb INFORMAL ruin, incapacitate, or break He banjaxed his knee in the sixth game of the season Basic research showed that it comes from the 1930s - 1930s: originally Anglo-Irish, of unknown origin (From Lexico) Merriam Webster gives a more specific "first known use" - 1939 However, it says: Banjax: history and etymology: origin unknown And Etymonline
  • Would it be correct to say, Im walking by my own?
    The usual idiom is I'm walking on my own, which could be a small child pointing out that they were walking unaided for the first time (unlikely since this stage of development usually precedes an ability to construct sentences) But it could equally be said by an adult who normally walks in a group - today, I'm walking on my own However, perhaps the more popular idiom would be I am walking by





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