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- 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
- English Language Usage Stack Exchange
Q A for linguists, etymologists, and serious English language enthusiasts
- abbreviations - Should I write PhD or Ph. D. ? - English Language . . .
Question pretty self-explanatory Should the abbreviation of the Latin term philosophiae doctor be written as PhD (no periods) or Ph D (with periods)?
- Renumeration vs Remuneration (reimbursed financially), which is correct?
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
- 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)
- pronouns - Is it ever correct to use “the both of them,” or is it . . .
It does not seem to be an archaic usage The English Dialect Dictionary, from 1898, characterizes it as var dial uses in Irel and Eng And Ngrams shows that its usage started increasing gradually around 1900, and has increased greatly since 2000 And the book English for Everybody, by G A Miller (1924; Boston, MA) says: Do not say:— The both of them are useful, Say:— Both of them are
- Is stife a name for smoking cooking oil?
A close, suffocating atmosphere, a choking vapour or smoke, a smoky sulphurous smell (Dmf s Sc 1825 Jam ; Rxb 1923 Watson W -B ; s Sc 1971) Also in n Eng dial This would seem to apply to smoking cooking oil In other words, something that stifles; the word is apparently a back formation thereof OED attests it as far back as 1636
- Usage and etymology of a pair of . . .
1432 Bailiff's Acct , Grantchester in Middle Eng Dict at Clouting For clowtyng of ij peyre schon Here are the definition of the relevant sense and usage of pair in question and the earliest citations of this sense from OED: 3 A single tool, instrument, or item of clothing, consisting of two joined or corresponding parts not used separately
- How to choose between work day vs working day
In general, a work day is a day on which you work, while the working day is that part of the day when you're at work: "my work days are Monday to Friday: at the end of the working day I go straight home to dinner" Working hours can be used to be more specific: "working hours are 9-5" A total number of working hours per day is often used in flexible working systems with core hours, i e hours
- 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?
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