- expressions - How to spell ewww as in ewww ahhh - English Language . . .
How to spell 'ewww' as in 'ewww ahhh' [closed] Ask Question Asked 12 years, 5 months ago Modified 12 years, 5 months ago
- etymology - Eww! Has it crossed the pond yet? - English Language . . .
The "ewww" thing seemed to come into popularity in the 1980s with the emergence of Valley Girl-speak (California, US) Jimmy Fallon (US late night talk show host) recently reprised this era with a skit of a pretend talk show called "EWWW": youtu be sIhU3mQTp1U you're sure to get your fill of "ewww" here! lol!
- Onomatopoeia for disgust - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
Are there any English onomatopoeias for disgust loathe? What exclamations are commonly used to express repulsion? Something that could be used like: (___) dog shit I loathe it! (some sound he
- What does categorical denial mean, and where does it originate?
So, is the term categorical borrowed from the logic term categorical syllogism? What specifically would categorical denial mean—and not mean—if used properly based on its logic roots? Or, did the term category originally mean absolute, then the disciplines of math and logic borrow the term and start using it in logical syllogisms
- What is the difference between whereabout and whereabouts
What is the difference between " whereabout " and " whereabouts " I have heard both of them, but don't know the difference Merriam-Webster just calls whereabout a less common variant of whereabouts, but that does not tell me what the difference is I would appreciate a lot the help
- What does P. U. (in reference to stinkiness) stand for?
"What does {holding nose} P U mean?" my son asked me tonight I told him I didn't know, and he laughed and said "It means stinky, Mommy!" Very funny and well said, but it left me wondering A
- Its unconventional, but is Ts Cs technically correct?
It looks a bit weird and isn't the commonly used term, but is it not correct? The apostrophe would be marking the shortening of "terms" to "t" and "conditions" to "c", of course
- Logged-in, log-ined, login-ed, logined, log-in-ed, logged in?
the answers in the post that I linked above say that the verb is to log in The past tense is therefore logged in
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