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felled    音标拼音: [f'ɛld]


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  • Fall, fell, felled - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    causative: fell, felled, has be felled, as opposed to intransitive: fall, fell, has fallen However, felling a dynasty or regime, or anything except a man, animal, or tree, is pretty rare today; OED 1 was already marking it as obsolete in 1895 Topple (in the transitive use) is more common EDIT -- taking a healthy bite of my words
  • meaning - Difference between logs, timber, and lumber - English . . .
    I'm interested in the distinctions between these three terms Here's what I already know: timber is wood that is still attached to the ground, and still has its bark on Lumber is already felled, a
  • Is it falling or felling? [closed] - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    Felling is associated with the idea of (some agent) making the subject fall, while falling refers simply to the subject's fall fell verb 1 Cut down (a tree) ‘33 million trees are felled each day’ 1 1 Knock down ‘Whitlock felled him with one punch’ - ODO fall verb 4 (no object, with adverbial) Be captured or defeated ‘their mountain strongholds fell to enemy attack’ - ODO Use
  • grammaticality - Why can’t you say “I fell the stairs”? - English . . .
    Down in the phrase He fell down the stairs is an adverb, as is off in the following: She fell off her bicycle Although in both instances the person ends up on the ground, in the latter we don't normally say: "She fell down from her bicycle" Consider someone who falls down on their knees, you'd never say: "fall onto their knees"
  • Why is dog in underdog? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    -3 Does it come from pioneer days of sawing trees by hand? Top dog was the one on top, and clean, underdog was the one in the pit below the felled tree sawing away getting covered in sawdust
  • Difference between fell to the ground vs. fell on the ground
    Subjectively, I feel there is a difference between the two Since the focus of "fell to the ground" is on the distance moved to the ground, I would expect the next sentence to focus on the damage to the wings or life of the bird Since "fell on the ground" is a much more common phrase, (fell on the stairs, fall on the playground, etc), it has its own feel It would not be unlikely for the next
  • grammaticality - Direct Object. Is there a rule? - English Language . . .
    Same thing here: "a great distance" is not what was "felled", it was how the thing fell By the way, "fell" can also be a transitive verb, though the usage is not common
  • In English relative clauses, when is preposition stranding allowed and . . .
    The acceptability of preposition stranding is not a straightforward matter, but the Cambridge Grammar of the English Language does have some guidelines: In many cases the stranding construction is preferred or required when the preposition is specified by the verb or a verbal idiom, as in account for, ask for, come across, consist of, face up to, look out for, tie in with, etc [ ] Adjusting
  • grammar - What is the difference between fell over and fell on in . . .
    There are two sentences below I fell over the stone on my way over I fell on the stone on my way over What is the difference between 'fell over' and 'fell on' in the two sentences?
  • Whats the origin of “yo”? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    I think that any etymology of "Yo!" that goes back only a few hundred years is woefully incomplete and quite absurd "Yo!" is used in more-or-less formal situations in East Asia (China, Japan), India (Dravidian languages), Africa (West and Central Africa), the United States, and Europe That usage range puts it well beyond the purview of Indo-European, and suggests that its origins could lie





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