2665:. The phonetics of Sino-Korean words tends to be more restricted than native Korean words. Sino-Korean words never or almost never use the tense ("double") consonants, compound final consonants, or aspirated "k", and they have fewer and more limited diphthongs. There are also some particular combinations of initial consonants plus vowels that are either rare or do not occur in Sino-Korean. There are characteristic ways that Sino-Korean words fit into a Korean sentence, such as using the helping verb "hada" (to make or do) instead of directly participating in Korean inflectional patterns. The paper also points out that Sino-Korean vocabulary includes words that do not exist in Chinese, but were derived in Korean by combining Chinese characters, and behave in Korean as Sino-Korean words. --
2422:(because you're such a suspicious individual). This one reminds me of when you previously asked about "TLDR", along with the word "entitled". In all three cases we have a conversion from a mundane, ordinary, unexciting object - a tract that's long and intractable, a person who genuinely deserves respect, an unremarkable mind functioning without peril or distress - to the exciting thing people really want to discuss: a short and catchy summary, a snob to throw eggs at, a dangerously disturbed mind and the dramatic story about living with it and taming it. It seems that generally speaking, whenever there's a name for something trivial and usual, the name is liable to be converted into a name for the unusual, opposite thing.
1372:
the Le
Corbusier that the public is allowed to see" would normally be, in French, "Celui n'est pas le Le Corbusier que le public est autorisé à voir." The pseudonym derives from an Old French professional surname equivalent to "The Cobbler", and Dali's grammatical maltreatment is what one should expect from someone treating "corbusier" as if it is a common noun. Dali's use is not standard, doubtlessly so on purpose. I reacted, though, to the observation that it is common in French to perceive articles in the titles of novels and such as ordinary articles and gave what I think is an example of a similar case in English. --
2440:"It seems that generally speaking, whenever there's a name for something trivial and usual, the name is liable to be converted into a name for the unusual, opposite thing." - that's pretty much just restating the subject of my question. If I went onto social media and jokingly posted "I'm having acute episodes of mental health lately", meaning that my mind is in great shape, I would get a lot of responses saying they're so sorry, asking if I'm ok, am I getting all the support I need yada yada. This "language change" b/s is so insidious: It stops now! d'ya hear? --
2389:. Since when was health a disease or disorder? Wouldn't the sign have been better worded "Mental illness symptoms"? Yes, I know there's a kind of stigma around the expression "mental illness", but this is surely what the signage is referring to, no? Would anyone ever say "symptoms of physical health" and expect it to be understood as "symptoms of physical illness"? We have "indicators" of health, but "symptoms" of illness or disease. Why are they needlessly confusing these things?--
2509:
Symptoms: Discover the crucial health symptoms you should always take seriously", and so on and so forth. I don't think these are a symptom of "health" being used as a term meaning the lack thereof. Uses of "acute episode of mental health", while strange, are possibly instances of sloppy shortening of typical phrases such as "acute (episode of) mental health crisis", "acute episode of mental health distress", and "acute (episode of) mental health issues". --
2744:
orthography became a far more common concrete realization of the vocabulary that was being borrowed into languages across the globe. This is also a factor for loanwords being borrowed into
English, but I think there is also a critical impulse in institutions and certain classes of writers that orthography remain "unanglicized" to various degrees as a matter of cosmopolitan respect or self-awareness in addition to recognizability among bilingual readers.
2785:(free pdf link), from which I suggest you read the introduction section to get an overview of the complexity of the problem as currently studied. (The intro at a glance suggests that English might best fit "large, widespread languages that are often learned by adults" which "may become simplified" per citation (14), and if that's truly the general systems case then you'd expect borrowing, or the robustness thereof, to decrease in the long term.)
1684:. I do find that "checkerboard" is usually a closed compound written as a single word, but "chess board" is more likely to be an open compound with a space. If some of your dictionaries recommend against "chessboard" in at least some contexts, that could be just because they would write it as two words with a space. I wonder whether they would prefer "checkerboard" or "chess board" as an alternative to "chessboard." --
941:) That the author would give it a thought let alone pass it on reveals how shallow her respect for the ancients is. That they created a whole god all wrong because they misunderstood instead of because their Serapis served their needs. Leaves a bad taste in my mouth! It's the sign of a mind that can't contribute. And here's how the book jacket describes her qualifications:
36:
1649:"Checkerboard" also refers more narrowly to the pattern itself. These are fine degrees of meaning, but if one used the term "checkerboard" to refer to a board being used to play chess, that visual pattern would be more directly emphasized in my mind. It would seem to be a deliberately literary choice of words, though. "Chessboard" is much more natural.
1276:), as are articles in the titles of novels and such. Clearly, in the latter case, the article is perceived as just that, an ordinary article, whereas in the names of people it is perceived as an integral, unmodifiable part of that name. Place names are inbetween, it seems that most are contracted, but that is not universal. --
1207:, le cadavre exquis du Corbu. Dans la Cour d'Appel, le Corbu montre le cas. Il le montre, le cas. La Cour examine le cas du Corbu, le cas et le ça, le ça et le cas, le cas du Corbu recorbuyoté au corbillon du cas, du ça, du cas, du caca, du Corbu, la castration, l’hibernation, la lévitation, l’antigravitation dans la
2849:
Crasis and other forms of final-vowel ellipsis are fairly common, as e.g. in πάρ το < πάρε το, τ’ όνειρο < το όνειρο, and ουτ’ αυτό < ούτε αυτό. Note that crasis is marked orthographically by an apostrophe, unlike other forms of ellipsis. It is also fairly common to omit the space: τ’όνειρο,
2743:
I will take recent to mean postwar or even later. I think this has to be the case in both directions relative to
English, the global lingua franca: for loanwords being borrowed from English, it's obvious this has to do with the massive increase in global literacy during the 20th century, meaning that
3095:
says " not concerned with a subset of letters belonging to a certain larger set. There is accordingly no 'not all' implicature, but often there will be a 'not multal' implicature – that the number of letters or amount of sugar is not particularly large." The fifth is exemplified by "Some people left
2618:
2. In Sino-Xenic languages, can a word’s syllable structure (which phoneme slots it has) as well as the specific phonemes that occupy those slots be used to aid in determining whether the word is native or derived from
Chinese (loanwords from other sources are ignored for the purpose of this query)?
2367:
It seems that the term "mental health" is very often used to mean its exact opposite, viz. mental illness. I know that sounds stupid, but I've had a few online discussions with people who've used it that way, and their position seems to be that that's what people are now saying, so what's the issue?
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By "unadapted", do you mean phonetically/phonotactically, and to what extent? So like, in
English, would words like deja vu and double entendre be considered unadapted French loanwords for your definition in this q? Or in French, place names like "Boston" that's been phonotactically altered so the
2109:
Almost all the apparent hits in the Google Books search are scanning errors, for unrelated words as different as "süeze", "-sätze", "kurze", "stütze" and others. There was only one hit I saw where it was genuinely written as an eye-dialect spelling of "Pfütze", and one that contained a family name
1371:
When "de Le
Corbusier" is contracted to "du Corbusier", it means that the author treats "Le" as an ordinary article; one would expect this author also to prefer "Celui-ci est un autre Corbusier que le public connaît" ("This is another Corbusier than the public knows"). Note that, say, "This is not
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hotel that was! An utter disgrace!" Each of these three rather obviously expresses something other than indefiniteness; let's put the three kinds aside. More of a challenge are the other two, which don't obviously come with extra semantic baggage. One is exemplified by "There are some letters for
2508:
We see, likewise, uses of just "health symptoms": "10 Health
Symptoms Women Shouldn't Ignore", "6 Health Symptoms That You Should Never Ignore", "Don't ignore health symptoms amid COVID-19 pandemic", "Dr.’s Tips: Health Symptoms and Warning Signs That Should Never Be Ignored", "Warning Health
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Yes, between the scan quality and the magazine being 90 years old, it is hard to read. I do have 高奇峰 in my notes as well, based on ZH-Wiki, so it's good to confirm that. Qi Gao seems to be a confirmation, which is good. (Wish I'd realized they'd written right-to-left... could have caught
1704:, an abstract pattern of squares in two alternating colors is known as "chequy", or a more modern alternative spelling is "checky". You wouldn't encounter the word in general use, but its meaning is exact in specifying a pure graphic pattern without reference to a board of any kind...
834:"Understanding Hieroglyphics", shot through with dubious claims, says "The terms that could be used for this designation were "born of" when using the mother's name and "made by" or "of his body" when using the father's name." (These are ms F31 and ir D4.) Interesting, but is it true?
2453:
For sure, by all the authority vested in you! It seems like some things only get mentioned in the negative when the positive side of it is "normal". Like when someone says we're going to have weather today. We have weather every day, but it's only a big deal when it's "bad" weather.
943:
Hilary Wilson has been interested in
Ancient Egypt since childhood. She trained as a mathematics teacher while at the University of Leicester, while at the same time taking courses on archaeology and mediaeval history. She has run courses in Egyptology at the University of
3271:(same visual components, only with the radical on top). The whole caption reads, transposed from right-to-left into left-to-right order: "畫家高奇峯氏近影" (simplified: "画家高奇峰氏近影"), which does seem to translate to what the English above says, "Recent photo of painter Gao Qifeng".
1894:
You can certainly do it, but you can do it in checkers too, so I'm not completely sure I follow Bugs's point. It definitely optimizes chess calculations to know that bishops stay on a color and knights change color every move. I bet even grandmasters rely on that.
2425:
Ideally I'd now test this theory by pulling out a few terms for dull routine situations, which ought to show signs of sometimes being used to mean the opposite. But I can't think of any more. I don't know, could "air quality" perhaps be a synonym for pollution?
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early" and "Some cheese is made from goat's milk" (note that the latter is singular). "Here we are concerned with quantity relative to some larger set, so that there is a clear 'not all' (and indeed 'not most') implicature". I think we can say that
1717:
One thing to keep in mind is that the board is "checked" in terms of its pattern. The pattern would seem to make it easier to play checkers, while chess could probably be played fairly easily on an 8 x 8 grid with all the squares the same color.
739:
contains the statement "Webster viewed language as a means to control disruptive thoughts. His
American Dictionary emphasized the virtues of social control over human passions and individualism." This seems a good reason to deploy multicultural
896:, appears to be well qualified in Egyptology and has written several books besides this one on the subject, issued by respected publishers: do you have some reason to doubt her expertise or honesty? {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195}
2403:
Euphemism? I can't reach the first link outside of
Australia, or as a non-paying reader or something, the the second link states "Mental health is an essential aspect of overall well-being...", so it isn't really used the way you claim it is.
312:
The game is voiced in Latin American Spanish and English, according to the page. I say es-419. In game, the character could be considered to speak es-PE or whatever Quechua dialect she uses, but the work she is in is Latin American Spanish, I
2802:
There's a classification of "unadapted borrowing" on Wiktionary, but I think it's more about spelling and orthography than phonetics. Most borrowings would be adapted in some way to the language in which it is borrowed, is my impression.
3190:
for free images. Unfortunately, the transliteration system they used does not reflect the modern system (they render his name Kao instead of Gao), and I can't read the original Chinese. I've found two that seem to be his brother, Jianfu
912:
Don't you judge some books better than others? It's one of those brash syntheses with misplaced self-confidence and inappropriate breadth. The claims that made me involuntarily laugh refer to no one. However, I quit after the first few
1155:
which I believe encourages it when referring to the artist, with "du Corbusier" being reserved for referring to one of his achievements instead. Whether this is a common stylistic theme throughout all of French, however, is beyond me.
2778:(the nonstandard pronunciation of which apparently comes from the unique mix of regions the 20th-century immigrants primarily came from -- see end of link), some of which would seem a permanent fixture now of greater American slang.
3221:
has a very similar photo and gives the name in Chinese characters as 高奇峰. The characters in your link are rather hard to make out and they may be traditional rather than simplified. No, characters 4 and 5 in the caption are
2708:
4. Given the Tibetan script’s overall stability in the face of 1200 years of sound changes, can the presence of certain letters or letter combinations be used to aid in determining when a word entered the Tibetan language?
593:, it should be fairly easy to program a browser extension (a person I saw online in one weekend both learned the Chrome extension tools and made a basic version of this) or even, if your only interest is Knowledge (XXG),
559:
I use Knowledge (XXG) a lot. The articles contain British spelling. I wish to change the Knowledge (XXG) content to articles with American spelling. Is this possible and, if so, how do I do this?
2545:
Now "née" literally means "born". The way the article reads is that she was first born as Lindstedt, but in 1906 this was somehow retroactively changed so that she was actually born as Loimaranta.
3137:/se.ˈri.a/. But are there any words where second vowel of hiatus is stressed or both vowels of hiatus are unstressed, like /se.ri.ˈa/ or /ˈse.ri.a/? Is there a way to indicate them in spelling? --
2259:
for "fuck" since I'd only encountered it as "futzing around with" in the sense of playing with a problem (basically etymology 2, sense 2). Could it have crossed back into German in altered form?
2009:
If you're posting on the ref desk you should take some responsibility for the correctness of your response. Google Translate did not "guess" as to the meaning. It "guessed" that you made a typo.
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stress is on the final syllable, while articulation remains largely the same? The most "raw" borrowings can probably be seen in urban youth dialects, so see the diversity in borrowings in
2084:
604:(the javascript is linked in the webpage source, and the replacement dictionary is linked from that) and then tinker from there. (Also, be sure run the javascript source through a
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1979:
I suggest you play around with Google Translate a bit more, including with incomplete words and phrases in other languages. That's not what it's literally trying to tell you.
2982:
The word “some” can also be used in the singular, like in “Some guy dropped this package off at the front desk earlier.” I would still consider it a demonstrative, however.
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Takes me back to when the British and the French jointly developed a supersonic aircraft. The British called it "Concord", the French "Concorde". In the spirit of the
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expected for a common noun in sentence case; these are probably proper nouns. You also don't want to touch literal quotations, like Churchill's "Here indeed was the Irish
2146:´s dictionary lists "Futz", a term for vagina, presumably related to the current word "Fut". There may be a plural, "Fütze". It seems to be used in Alemannic areas.
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In several parts of Germany, words beginning with 'Pf' are often pronounced without the initial 'P'. 'Pfütze' is actually given as one of the examples for this by the
2027:" (which apparently means "puddle"). I'm not going to claim that Google Translate is any sort of oracle. But don't yell at me for what Google Translate came up with. ←
1339:
There's also the phenomenon of dropping the "the" but not from the object of the phrase. In TV speak, when referring to a new episode of some long-running show (e.g.
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I understated it, her "selected bibliography" pg 218 is just "here's some books I've read." No references. Light fare, and recent. On page 38 there's an etiology of
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would mean anything, and the best I could come up with was "Sitting Crow", admitting that I know just about nothing of Lakota grammatical and syntactical rules...
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Lower, inferior, underlying, bottom? I may be missing some important aspect of your question, because this seems too easy. Do you want an adjective? Should it
2548:
Now I think the intended meaning is that she was born as Lindstedt but the family later changed their name to Loimaranta. How should this be properly written?
1815:
You say "chess could probably be played fairly easily on an 8x8 grid with all the squares the same color." Do you know how the bishop and the queen move?
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Although it is very odd that a mainstream word game would have as its solution a dated variant spelling of a highly vulgar, sexual term, to begin with.
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I don't speak Spanish and I don't really understand their use of acute accents to indicate the stress. But in Portuguese you can have a word like
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6: Do phenomena such as contraction of certain vowel combinations, elision of some word-final short vowels, and crasis still occur in modern Greek?
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As the word, in its many variants, have a very old history in German, I'd rather stipulate that the English word arrived via German immigrants.
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I'm not sure about this comparison, Lambiam. The English example is about dropping the "the" after an article (either def or indef: "I read the
1272:). The tenor is that names of persons are not contracted (Le Corbusier is an often cited example), the names of places are usually contracted (
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3086:) describes five kinds of use. Three are exemplified by "We discussed the problem at some length", "Some day I will win the lottery", and "
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1. Is it known roughly when the Arabic feature of the L-sound in the article al assimilating into following coronal or sun letters arose?
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My question is about not so much dropping 2 words and replacing them with 1, but about transforming 2 into 1. Same end result, I know. --
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Would it be more accurate to state her full name (Infobox) as being Latin American Spanish or Quechua? Need to know for Wikidata purposes
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1681:. This tutorial uses "chess board" for an object that clearly does not have the appropriate shape and size to put chess pieces on:
2538:), (née Loimaranta, before 1906 née Lindstedt) (10 March 1881 – 3 November 1954) was a Finnish doctor and an active member of the
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Well, in the infobox, subsidiary is listed immediately after "parent organization", and means the opposite. It's wikilinked to
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In Spanish, a high vowel (i or u) is normally pronounced as a semivowel (/j/ or /w/) when before another vowel. For example,
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3. Was the labial W-glide in Middle Chinese (and in early forms of Japanese that had it) only allowed with velar initials?
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I specified German-to-English. I put "fütze" under German and it gave me "fuss" under English. It also said "Did you mean:
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I'm just telling you what Google Translate says. Whether it's correct or not, the only "guessing" is by Google Translate. ←
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Please be as specific as possible, and include all relevant context – the usefulness of answers may depend on the context.
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Select the section of the desk that best fits the general topic of your question (see the navigation column to the right).
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is pronounced /ˈse.rja/. If there is an acute accent, then the vowels form a hiatus and first vowel is stressed, like in
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Is there an English word to refer to an entity that is under another one where both of them are not part of each other?
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5: Has greater global interconnectedness in recent times led to an increase in the prevalence of unadapted borrowings?
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can be a verb in Br Eng, and that one would be left unchanged. I was also trying to come up with an ambiguity such as
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I strongly ask you again that you take responsibility for the reliability of answers you post on the Reference Desk.
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3160:(health), in which there is a hiatus between the vowels and the second is stressed. And of course, in a word like
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We don't conduct original research or provide a free source of ideas, but we'll help you find information you need.
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was used for the modern descendant of the French u sound that English lacks. Because of the Great Vowel Shift,
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672:—horrid and inexorcisable!" Next to grammatical differences there are also lexical ones, e.g. British English
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A perceived change in some function, sensation or appearance of a person that indicates a disease or disorder
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and pronounced like the modern English oo in moon. But because English was influenced by French, it became
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Oh I see, you meant "entity" as in an organisation, and "under" as in "managed by". Context is everything.
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although that last one might be the words of Dali. In fact it's from a letter written by Dali which goes:
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the possibility that the two entities are part of the same whole? Should it be limited to two entities?
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It was quite a shock when youngsters started to call it "a day" instead of calling it "an day". In the
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Post your question to only one section, providing a short header that gives the topic of your question.
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m'a rempli d'une joie immense. Le Corbusier était une creature pitoyable travaillant en béton armé.
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characters) at the end – this signs and dates your contribution so we know who wrote what and when.
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Meanwhile, you can search Google for "fütze" in quotes and see how it's actually used in context.
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Hi. I'm writing an article on the painter Gao Qifeng, and I was looking through older copies of
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Illari and Quispe is predominantly Quechua, Ruiz is Spanish but not necessarily Latin American.
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Don't post personal contact information – it will be removed. Any answers will be provided here.
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only specifies having a position with less height, not necessarily underneath the other thing.
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Baseball Bugs has just been clobbered on the Humanities and Language desks. One more for him:
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I have always depended on the kindness of ref desk editors who come up with germane quotes. --
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and links to sources. Do not edit others' comments and do not give any medical or legal advice.
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Thanks for your reply. What has a "subsidiary" has to do with a organisation as given in this
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has become the standard spelling when it is final. Originally (in Anglo-Saxon) it was spelled
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is possibly another example: modern usage tends to be the gaming sense of "too powerful".
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al-Qaeda member". The a short like "uh", followed by a shocking glottal stop. Tragic. --
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We don't answer (and may remove) questions that require medical diagnosis or legal advice.
2110:
that was actually "Fütze". No, it's not a word in German, neither dialectal nor archaic.
1948:
I can't find it on wiktionary. Your closest guess (if it's germanic) might be related to
1861:
Yeah, it's not that difficult if one pays a little bit of attention. If the board were 16
1679:
1565:
Some dictionaries say that either term is always acceptable. Other dictionaries say that
1506:, dating from the third quarter of the 13th century, the scribe renders the inception of
1759:
Maybe it shouldn't, but it tickles me considerably that every sense of the English word
1527:
I saw that in your edit summary and assumed it meant "see you soon", but I guess not. --
646:
which could sometimes be parsed as re-arise, but at other times be equivalent to Am Eng
3399:
3352:
3344:
is either scientific (as used in anatomy) or has a more common meaning of "less good".
2789:
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2489:
2427:
2335:
2041:
2010:
1983:
1953:
1896:
1793:
1741:, along with the derived terms checker, checkers, checked, etc., all come from Persian
1528:
1461:
1312:
1249:
1241:
1223:
1196:
770:
719:
651:
609:
124:
2788:
Anyway, I'd need you to specify your question more. Then I can ask Google Scholar :).
1190:
de Le Corbusier; des groupies de Le Corbusier; le cadavre superexquis de Le Corbusier,
555:
Can I change Knowledge (XXG) so that articles appear in American English? If so, how?
3420:
3102:
Yes, it's a determinative (functioning as a determiner). No it's not a demonstrative.
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1343:) rather than the repeats they've been foisting on us for weeks, they'll say: "New
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946:
Not a good source. This is the kind of book where lines of fact checking go to die.
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1865:
16 there would be constant visualization problems, but it's still manageable at 8
1187:
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2774:
or similar, or else immigrant ethnolects like you see in a possibly-diminishing
2256:
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790:
664:
Some respelling errors can be avoided by not touching terms that are not in the
493:
in English (which comes from Anglo-Saxon long u) became the sound it has now in
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would be incorrectly corrected. Some differences are grammatical, for instance
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We don't do your homework for you, though we'll help you past the stuck point.
1949:
3038:(one that, come to think of it, I haven't heard for quite some time), as in
1457:
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1674:
Flat surfaces with this pattern are often used for camera calibration. The
992:
601:
2648:
What are some of the phonetic signs therein of native or Chinese origin?
2549:
1609:
1598:
939:
A common myth is that it was a Guugu Yimithirr phrase for "I don't know".
934:
395:. It seems a little strange that this isn't mentioned in the article...
335:
234:
1966:
I specified German-to-English, and it translated it as "fuss". Try it! ←
3369:
for the template of an infobox? Does the term "subsidiary" in the page
2148:
I have never heard it in 80 years, but I may speak to the wrong people.
1917:
Hello friends, any idea what "fütze" means? Is it slang? Archaic? t.y.
1308:
930:
761:
Though I'm unclear how in practice teaching people to spell words like
392:
233:
The best answers address the question directly, and back up facts with
3268:
3264:
1573:
is acceptable only when it has chess pieces on it. Which is correct??
278:
3267:, which seems to be one of the traditional equivalents of simplified
3203:
may be Qifeng. Would someone who reads Chinese be able to confirm? —
1701:
1675:
1448:
Not only younger people these days. As I've quoted here before, from
364:
2252:
2054:
I am not responsible for the answers that Google Translate gives. ←
3373:
mean a company, or an entity affiliated to the main organisation?
2178:
1151:
uses "de Le Corbusier" near-universally. In fact, the article has
590:
173:
2915:
The plural equivalent of "I see a crow" is simply "I see crows".
2900:
So, if "the" and "a" are articles, why is "some" not an article?
2164:
I think "Fotze" is a fairly common slang term in current German.
1244:", in which case "recorbuyoté au corbillon" sort of makes sense.
1038:. Is this a standard exception for personal names and pseudonyms?
1792:, literally "chessboard", a checkered cloth for counting coins.
1742:
2775:
3034:, no more" might be complicated slightly by an unusual use of
747:
for those who demand racial purity in Wikipedian spelling. --
152:
136:
578:
Knowledge (XXG):Manual of Style#National varieties of English
505:
in English (which comes from Anglo-Norman long u) became the
192:
We don't answer requests for opinions, predictions or debate.
650:
meaning "to make more rear". Fortunately that's not a word.
3028:
but is unspoken if the head is plural. Saying "expresses ±
1513:
as "An preost", but a copy made half a century later, the
966:
needs work, was it written by her agent? Kinda promotiony.
355:
I'm not even sure if Winnetou would even mean anything in
3283:
Thank you! I've incorporated the image into the draft. —
2342:. Here it is mentioned as a word example "Fütze/Pfütze".
1042:
It doesn't seem to be the case for titles of books etc.
605:
3263:
The "feng" character in the magazine caption is written
2233:
Seems to have been the case for early Yiddish, as well.
1952:, unless like you say it's slang or a recent borrowing.
1430:
Younger people these days would be more likely to say "
1266:), I find lots of forum discussions on the topic (e.g.
1089:
Or was Dalí, being Spanish, speaking broken French? --
208:
108:
2181:
lists Futz as an older or dialectal variant of Fotze.
1002:
_'des':_an_exception?-September_8-20240908001700": -->
995:
_'des':_an_exception?-September_8-20240908001700": -->
626:
in doing this. Many names would be respelled, such as
3100:
is insufficiently bland to be classed as an article.
2927:—which makes it a determinative, but not an article.
3310:
English word to refer to an entity under another one
3046:
sneaker this season" (requiring a heavy emphasis on
2091:, I suspect that it's a possibly-archaic variant of
1596:
thing. In British English, it's more often called a
1222:. I have no idea about "recorbuyoté au corbillon".)
331:
1218:mixed in there. (I guess "courbillon" is a play on
391:Winnetou is very likely some kind of distortion of
1700:In the technical heraldic descriptive language of
1030:The first thing that I noticed was that it wasn't
785:I wonder if the OP can handle the spelling of the
3164:(glory) neither of the final vowels is stressed.
2662:For Korean, here's a pretty comprehensive paper:
2590:A couple of questions (primarily about phonology)
2340:de:Dialekte_im_Eichsfeld#Untereichsfelder Mundart
689:Is it really that hard to read British spelling?
2122:Tracks for this database :( Thank you very much.
1842:Yes, I know how the chess pieces work. Do you? ←
933:that reads like the bunk about the etymology of
3180:Identification of Subject based on Chinese text
1813:
1678:docs seem to use either term indiscriminately:
1193:
459:are all fairly recent loan words except "you".
1745:, referring to the king in a game of chess. --
1180:I found over 100 uses of "de Le Corbusier" in
830:Egyptian personal names and gendered parentals
630:, various place names, and band names such as
3079:The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language
2542:women's auxiliary paramilitary organisation.
1913:another odd wördle.de answer (Sept 10 answer)
1412:Once in 2005 I was pleased to see the phrase
497:, and for some unknown reason was re-spelled
8:
2892:Instead, in the last case, we'd use "some":
1381:It's surrealist wordplay, very Daliesque...
2781:As a stab in the dark, I'll refer first to
807:, the latter spelling was amicably agreed.
1262:Googling the question (my search term was
600:As a template, you can view the source of
597:, with UK-to-US replacement rules encoded.
3427:Knowledge (XXG) resources for researchers
2634:Probably in Japanese and Korean, anyway.
2373:I had … an acute episode of mental health
1607:, depending on what it's being used for.
622:There are of course a lot of hazards and
227:Knowledge (XXG):Reference desk/Guidelines
3056:but also more besides: examples include
3022:; or you could say that if it's simply −
2570:I changed it to "née Lindstedt; surname
2296:Them futzing Angels, Saxons and Jutes...
1932:Google Translate says it means "fuss". ←
509:sound, which is now often simplified to
473:It is mostly the fault of the fact that
424:Are there any English words where final
1121:
861:
769:was supposed to improve their manners.
359:. Once, I tried looking up a web-based
1264:contraction de le du avec noms propres
45:of the Knowledge (XXG) reference desk.
3166:2A02:C7B:223:9900:A88D:8EE5:E75B:3C1A
2968:2A02:C7B:223:9900:6CC3:8F33:6056:E8EA
2371:Here's an example from today's news:
2313:Further back, it gets even futzier...
2217:Leibniz Institute for German Language
1325:Are you going to the The The concert?
809:2A02:C7B:223:9900:6CC3:8F33:6056:E8EA
7:
1400:It would be "a concert", though. --
457:list of English words ending in "ou"
2964:Article (grammar)#Partitive article
2881:But "a"/"an" can only be singular:
2378:This is from a hospital's website:
676:(of a car) versus American English
589:Since Knowledge (XXG) does not use
279:https://overwatch.fandom.com/Illari
159:How can I get my question answered?
2251:Huh. All this time I assumed that
1307:On the other hand, it would be "a
595:your own customized CSS stylesheet
31:
3394:, which gives the alternate term
3050:). Other determinatives express ±
2870:"The" can be singular or plural:
1763:is derived from the chess sense.
1290:In English we similarly write "a
485:when Middle English evolved, and
244:
55:
2574:to Loimaranta before marriage".
1945:In what language? No it doesn't?
842:) 22:22, 7 September 2024 (UTC)
332:https://www.wikidata.org/Q828542
34:
2338:(lower Eichsfeld) dialect. See
1617:, when used, are usually spelt
1569:is always acceptable, but that
1311:concert", not "a The concert".
1240:"Corbillon" is also a play on "
43:Welcome to the language section
3437:Knowledge (XXG) reference desk
3408:22:04, 19 September 2024 (UTC)
3383:21:48, 19 September 2024 (UTC)
3361:19:24, 19 September 2024 (UTC)
3324:19:06, 19 September 2024 (UTC)
3293:21:38, 17 September 2024 (UTC)
3279:20:23, 17 September 2024 (UTC)
3255:19:48, 17 September 2024 (UTC)
3240:19:04, 17 September 2024 (UTC)
3213:17:53, 17 September 2024 (UTC)
3174:16:03, 17 September 2024 (UTC)
3147:13:19, 17 September 2024 (UTC)
3114:08:27, 19 September 2024 (UTC)
3042:'Never Surrender High-Top' is
3012:(of course with its allomorph
3008:, no more. You could say that
2992:15:39, 16 September 2024 (UTC)
2976:15:39, 16 September 2024 (UTC)
2948:15:34, 16 September 2024 (UTC)
2910:15:28, 16 September 2024 (UTC)
2855:03:10, 15 September 2024 (UTC)
2838:We see, also in Modern Greek,
2833:22:24, 14 September 2024 (UTC)
2813:19:38, 15 September 2024 (UTC)
2798:15:13, 15 September 2024 (UTC)
2765:22:36, 14 September 2024 (UTC)
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2719:16:33, 14 September 2024 (UTC)
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2629:16:33, 14 September 2024 (UTC)
2609:16:33, 14 September 2024 (UTC)
2584:12:28, 14 September 2024 (UTC)
2565:12:26, 14 September 2024 (UTC)
2532:Suoma Helena Loimaranta-Airila
2514:15:39, 14 September 2024 (UTC)
2498:20:36, 15 September 2024 (UTC)
2478:20:58, 15 September 2024 (UTC)
2463:22:03, 14 September 2024 (UTC)
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2105:16:29, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
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2019:20:28, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
2005:18:52, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
1992:18:33, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
1975:18:25, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
1962:16:32, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
1941:16:20, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
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1905:19:59, 13 September 2024 (UTC)
1890:18:26, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
1851:18:24, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
1831:18:20, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
1802:08:16, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
1788:One of those derived terms is
1784:16:56, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
1755:16:54, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
1727:16:26, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
1694:15:29, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
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1254:13:23, 10 September 2024 (UTC)
978:00:32, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
958:00:05, 12 September 2024 (UTC)
925:03:34, 11 September 2024 (UTC)
817:15:22, 16 September 2024 (UTC)
799:15:17, 16 September 2024 (UTC)
763:rumor, skunk, apothegm, donut,
334:. Name in native language is "
125:Help searching Knowledge (XXG)
18:Knowledge (XXG):Reference desk
1:
3371:Template:Infobox organization
2923:but also quantity, just like
2866:Why is "some" not an article?
2772:Multicultural Toronto English
2363:"Mental health" as a negative
1405:17:57, 8 September 2024 (UTC)
1391:20:43, 8 September 2024 (UTC)
1377:19:31, 8 September 2024 (UTC)
1367:17:44, 8 September 2024 (UTC)
1321:16:17, 8 September 2024 (UTC)
1303:15:25, 8 September 2024 (UTC)
1286:07:47, 8 September 2024 (UTC)
1232:06:17, 8 September 2024 (UTC)
1168:06:00, 8 September 2024 (UTC)
1100:00:17, 8 September 2024 (UTC)
906:13:32, 9 September 2024 (UTC)
869:Wilson, Hilary (2019-07-25).
852:22:22, 7 September 2024 (UTC)
779:07:47, 8 September 2024 (UTC)
757:06:18, 8 September 2024 (UTC)
729:20:53, 7 September 2024 (UTC)
699:12:18, 7 September 2024 (UTC)
685:07:22, 7 September 2024 (UTC)
660:05:20, 7 September 2024 (UTC)
618:18:55, 6 September 2024 (UTC)
585:18:46, 6 September 2024 (UTC)
572:18:19, 6 September 2024 (UTC)
545:15:19, 8 September 2024 (UTC)
535:, "you" is pronounced "yow".
523:15:48, 6 September 2024 (UTC)
469:15:37, 6 September 2024 (UTC)
450:14:53, 6 September 2024 (UTC)
405:18:52, 7 September 2024 (UTC)
377:22:02, 6 September 2024 (UTC)
351:17:38, 6 September 2024 (UTC)
326:17:34, 6 September 2024 (UTC)
308:01:38, 6 September 2024 (UTC)
293:22:36, 5 September 2024 (UTC)
2846:, and Νικόλας < Νικόλαος.
1561:Checkerboard or chessboard??
1486:Dickens: “the law is a ass”
3432:Knowledge (XXG) help forums
2468:Clearly a weather episode!
2418:You're always vigilant for
1332:headline"; "I read it in a
1176:_'des':_an_exception?": -->
1175:_'du',_and_'de_les'_--: -->
1172:_'des':_an_exception?": -->
1171:_'du',_and_'de_les'_--: -->
1167:_'des':_an_exception?": -->
1166:_'du',_and_'de_les'_--: -->
1113:_'des':_an_exception?": -->
1112:_'du',_and_'de_les'_--: -->
1108:_'des':_an_exception?": -->
1107:_'du',_and_'de_les'_--: -->
1104:_'des':_an_exception?": -->
1103:_'du',_and_'de_les'_--: -->
1099:_'des':_an_exception?": -->
1098:_'du',_and_'de_les'_--: -->
1009:_'des':_an_exception?": -->
1008:_'du',_and_'de_les'_--: -->
1001:_'du',_and_'de_les'_--: -->
994:_'du',_and_'de_les'_--: -->
743:We also have an article on
501:at the end of a word. Long
428:represents /aʊ/ other than
219:How do I answer a question?
171:Type '~~~~' (that is, four
48:
3453:
998:'du', and 'de les' --: -->
602:Josh May's javascript tool
513:after certain consonants.
210:Ready? Ask a new question!
98:
3199:), based on the glasses.
3068:too is more complex than
2940:
2757:
2534:, (first married surname
1882:
1776:
1662:
1069:- referring to the opera
1054:- referring to the novel
873:. Michael O'Mara. p. 41.
871:Understanding Hieroglyphs
3002:. An article expresses ±
2998:That's a good question,
1450:A Streetcar Named Desire
1347:", rather than "The new
1174:
1170:
1111:
1106:
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1007:
1000:
993:
2334:The word may be of the
1504:MS Cotton Caligula A.ix
787:Space Shuttle Endeavour
2776:Italian-American slang
2380:mental health symptoms
1817:
1213:
1199:du Corbu, le Corbu du
1149:French Knowledge (XXG)
997:French 'de le' --: -->
608:to make it readable.)
338:(German)", not Apache.
1515:MS Cotton Otho C.xiii
1294:headline" and not "a
1182:Le Monde diplomatique
634:. Exceptions such as
529:Black Country dialect
363:dictionary to see if
118:Want a faster answer?
2179:Deutsches Wörterbuch
1517:, has "A prest". --
1085:many other examples.
999:'des': an exception?
432:and the truncations
3187:The Young Companion
1592:: This is likely a
767:gray mustache fiber
3125:Spanish diphthongs
3016:) also expresses −
2783:Bromhan et al 2014
2526:Suoma af Hällström
2300:Cookatoo.ergo.ZooM
2152:Cookatoo.ergo.ZooM
1296:The New York Times
749:Cookatoo.ergo.ZooM
715:policy on spelling
274:Illari Quispe Ruiz
24:Knowledge (XXG):QL
3103:
3076:. On pp 380–381,
2962:
2480:
2314:
2297:
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1539:
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1079:The Pearl Fishers
879:978-1-78929-107-0
436:("thousand") and
53:Select a section:
22:(Redirected from
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709:Have you tried
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628:Victoria Arbour
606:code beautifier
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3285:Chris Woodrich
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3247:Chris Woodrich
3205:Chris Woodrich
3181:
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3177:
3176:
3126:
3123:
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3064:(indefinite).
2995:
2994:
2984:Primal Groudon
2980:
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2978:
2951:
2950:
2898:
2897:
2890:
2889:
2888:*I see a crows
2886:
2879:
2878:
2875:
2874:I see the crow
2867:
2864:
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2859:
2858:
2857:
2847:
2825:Primal Groudon
2820:
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2779:
2767:
2730:Primal Groudon
2725:
2722:
2711:Primal Groudon
2705:
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2691:Primal Groudon
2686:
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2650:Primal Groudon
2621:Primal Groudon
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2385:A symptom is:
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2336:Untereichsfeld
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1484:
1414:a Qaeda member
1410:
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1408:
1397:
1396:
1395:
1394:
1393:
1356:
1351:" or "The new
1337:
1326:
1298:headline". --
1292:New York Times
1260:
1259:
1258:
1257:
1256:
1242:court-bouillon
1214:with a use of
1197:cadavre exquis
1178:
1142:
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1057:Le Père Goriot
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598:
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582:Viennese Waltz
556:
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440:("trousers")?
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49:skip to bottom
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2959:edit conflict
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2850:ουτ’αυτό. --
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2464:
2460:
2457:
2456:Baseball Bugs
2452:
2451:
2450:
2447:
2445:
2439:
2438:
2437:
2434:
2431:
2424:
2421:
2420:auto-antonyms
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2255:was a simple
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2124:70.67.193.176
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2119:
2116:
2113:
2108:
2107:
2106:
2102:
2098:
2094:
2090:
2086:
2085:Google Ngrams
2082:
2064:
2060:
2057:
2056:Baseball Bugs
2053:
2052:
2051:
2047:
2043:
2039:
2038:
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2033:
2030:
2029:Baseball Bugs
2026:
2022:
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2020:
2016:
2012:
2008:
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2006:
2002:
1999:
1998:Baseball Bugs
1995:
1994:
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1968:Baseball Bugs
1965:
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1934:Baseball Bugs
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1919:70.67.193.176
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1893:
1892:
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1844:Baseball Bugs
1841:
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1821:(at 1:41:58)
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1720:Baseball Bugs
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1073:Les pêcheurs
1068:
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1024:Salvador Dalí
1021:
1019:
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987:
979:
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964:Hilary Wilson
961:
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894:Hilary Wilson
891:
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721:
720:-- Verbarson
716:
712:
711:Conservapedia
708:
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683:
679:
675:
671:
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632:Living Colour
629:
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88:Miscellaneous
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63:Entertainment
61:
59:
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50:
39:
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25:
19:
3395:
3375:Neutralhappy
3349:
3345:
3341:
3337:
3330:
3316:Neutralhappy
3313:
3305:September 19
3230:missing. --
3227:
3223:
3219:This website
3197:bottom right
3185:
3183:
3161:
3157:
3156:(class) and
3153:
3134:
3130:
3128:
3120:September 17
3097:
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3061:
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3035:
3013:
3009:
2941:
2931:
2924:
2921:definiteness
2919:specifies in
2916:
2899:
2891:
2885:I see a crow
2880:
2869:
2861:September 16
2822:
2758:
2748:
2727:
2707:
2688:
2617:
2598:
2576:Double sharp
2547:
2544:
2536:af Hällström
2531:
2530:
2524:The article
2523:
2520:Née question
2485:
2386:
2384:
2377:
2370:
2366:
2358:September 14
2097:GalacticShoe
2089:Google Books
2024:
1916:
1883:
1873:
1823:80.44.89.207
1818:
1814:
1777:
1767:
1760:
1663:
1653:
1623:chequerboard
1622:
1618:
1615:checkerboard
1614:
1608:
1604:
1597:
1570:
1567:checkerboard
1566:
1564:
1556:September 11
1509:
1453:
1449:
1431:
1413:
1352:
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1340:
1333:
1329:
1295:
1291:
1273:
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1216:du Corbusier
1215:
1194:
1185:
1158:GalacticShoe
1134:
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1116:
1088:
1080:
1072:
1070:
1065:des pêcheurs
1064:
1062:
1055:
1049:
1047:
1041:
1034:du Corbusier
1033:
1031:
1017:Le Corbusier
1014:
1012:
1006:
942:
938:
892:The author,
870:
864:
856:
833:
804:
766:
762:
740:orthography.
737:Noah Webster
677:
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257:Village pump
224:
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122:
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117:
72:
33:
3232:Wrongfilter
2540:Lotta Svärd
2528:starts as:
2486:Overpowered
2257:minced oath
1950:wikt:Pfütze
1590:Georgia guy
1575:Georgia guy
1278:Wrongfilter
1153:a cite note
988:September 8
944:Southampton
898:94.6.83.137
825:September 7
691:Alansplodge
562:Thank you.
537:Alansplodge
515:Georgia guy
461:Alansplodge
415:September 6
313:understand.
269:September 5
262:Help manual
225:Main page:
123:Main page:
78:Mathematics
3421:Categories
3401:Card Zero
3392:subsidiary
3354:Card Zero
3346:Underlying
2819:Question 6
2805:惑乱 Wakuran
2724:Question 5
2704:Question 4
2685:Question 3
2636:惑乱 Wakuran
2614:Question 2
2595:Question 1
2572:Finnicized
2491:Card Zero
2470:惑乱 Wakuran
2443:Jack of Oz
2429:Card Zero
2406:惑乱 Wakuran
2392:Jack of Oz
2316:惑乱 Wakuran
2275:惑乱 Wakuran
2261:Matt Deres
2235:惑乱 Wakuran
2197:惑乱 Wakuran
2183:惑乱 Wakuran
2166:惑乱 Wakuran
1795:Card Zero
1733:Note that
1605:chessboard
1571:chessboard
1508:Layamon's
1475:Jack of Oz
1437:Jack of Oz
1383:惑乱 Wakuran
1361:Jack of Oz
1336:article").
1314:Card Zero
1225:Card Zero
1220:tourbillon
1209:basse-cour
1201:corbillard
1117:References
1092:Jack of Oz
970:Temerarius
950:Temerarius
917:Temerarius
857:References
844:Temerarius
836:Temerarius
772:Card Zero
666:lower case
653:Card Zero
624:edge cases
369:惑乱 Wakuran
300:惑乱 Wakuran
68:Humanities
3273:Fut.Perf.
3245:that). —
2790:SamuelRiv
2253:wikt:futz
2112:Fut.Perf.
2083:Based on
2042:SamuelRiv
2011:SamuelRiv
1984:SamuelRiv
1954:SamuelRiv
1897:Trovatore
1790:exchequer
1702:Blazoning
1594:WP:ENGVAR
1529:Trovatore
1349:The Chase
1345:The Chase
1341:The Chase
1205:arbousier
1075:de perles
1067:de perles
913:chapters.
648:*rearize,
610:SamuelRiv
252:Help desk
242:See also:
235:wikilinks
58:Computing
3342:Inferior
3201:This one
3193:top left
3053:DEFINITE
3031:DEFINITE
3025:DEFINITE
3005:DEFINITE
3000:Marnanel
2932:Remsense
2902:Marnanel
2842:next to
2749:Remsense
1874:Remsense
1768:Remsense
1706:AnonMoos
1654:Remsense
1619:chequers
1610:Checkers
1599:draughts
1488:—Tamfang
1418:—Tamfang
1274:du Havre
1188:lunettes
1063:Musique
1050:du "Pere
1032:La mort
1026:, 1969)
1013:La mort
935:Kangaroo
644:rearise,
397:AnonMoos
336:Winnetou
330:Compare
247:Teahouse
101:Shortcut
93:Archives
73:Language
3350:bottom.
3336:Notes:
3331:exclude
3226:, with
2852:Lambiam
2511:Lambiam
2459:carrots
2221:Morinox
2059:carrots
2032:carrots
2001:carrots
1971:carrots
1937:carrots
1847:carrots
1723:carrots
1519:Lambiam
1402:Lambiam
1374:Lambiam
1309:The The
1300:Lambiam
1052:Goriot"
1011:Quote:
931:Serapis
682:Lambiam
670:spectre
531:of the
393:Manitou
109:WP:RD/L
83:Science
3405:(talk)
3358:(talk)
3269:wikt:峰
3265:wikt:峯
3224:qi gao
3162:glória
3093:CamGEL
3091:you".
3084:CamGEL
3062:either
3019:PLURAL
2844:αγαπάω
2495:(talk)
2433:(talk)
2093:Pfütze
2025:pfütze
1799:(talk)
1676:OpenCV
1634:Bazza
1318:(talk)
1229:(talk)
791:HiLo48
776:(talk)
657:(talk)
564:Bcgura
365:Yakari
361:Lakota
186:Note:
3338:lower
3158:saúde
3139:40bus
3135:sería
3131:seria
3106:Hoary
2840:αγαπώ
2667:Amble
2144:Grimm
1761:check
1747:Amble
1739:check
1735:chess
1686:Amble
1601:board
1454:a ape
1353:Chase
724:edits
680:. --
678:trunk
591:slang
455:This
343:Error
318:Error
285:Trade
174:tilde
16:<
3379:talk
3367:page
3320:talk
3289:talk
3251:talk
3236:talk
3228:feng
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3154:aula
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3110:talk
3098:some
3088:Some
3066:Some
3058:both
2988:talk
2972:talk
2925:four
2917:Some
2906:talk
2829:talk
2809:talk
2794:talk
2734:talk
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2605:talk
2580:talk
2562:Talk
2474:talk
2410:talk
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2304:talk
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2201:talk
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2101:talk
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1046:...
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954:talk
921:talk
902:talk
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765:and
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695:talk
674:boot
640:bath
614:talk
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434:thou
430:thou
401:talk
373:talk
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3104:--
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