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  • What is the history and meaning of the suffix -ism?
    French -isme, Latin -ismus, < Greek -ισμός, forming nouns of action from verbs in -ίζειν, e g βαπτίζειν to dip, baptize, βαπτισμός the action of dipping, baptism An allied suffix was -ισμα (τ-), which more strictly expressed the finished act or thing done, and which in some cases is the source of modern -ism
  • adverbs - The next week vs the following week - English Language . . .
    There's little difference between "the following week" and "the next week" But refer to the week after some previously established event or time period If nothing specific is established, we would normally assume it's the time that she originally made the statement "next week", without "the", means the week after the current time When she originally made the statement, it was the week
  • Whats the difference between egotism and egoism?
    1 "Egoism" would be the term regularly formed of its Latin Greek parts: ego + -ismus -ismos The t in "egotism" was probably added by analogy to some -ismes in French that have an intrusive t, which can be inserted between vowels in French
  • etymology - Why does -istic turn some words negative? - English . . .
    suffix forming nouns of action, state, condition, doctrine, from French -isme or directly from Latin -isma, -ismus, from Greek -isma, from stem of verbs in -izein
  • What is the difference between ‘Is it free’ and ‘Is it on the house?’
    It is possible that the awkwardness was due to the local standards of etiquette, rather than the language; i e it may be that they understood the meaning of the phrase very well, but perceived it as indelicate to explicitly ask whether something is on the house
  • To whoever it may concern - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    "To whoever it may concern," Actually, I like that expression "To whoever it may concern" It sounds natural to my ear, and it seems to be the speaker's attempt to use a fused relative in the salutation in a not-too-formal of a tone There might even be a reasonable argument that the fused relative is being used in a free choice construction that would be equivalent in meaning to: To anyone
  • single word requests - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    What do you call (a noun or an adjective) a person who keeps talking to someone despite the fact that they're clearly not interested in having a conversation with that person? The most typical (but
  • Is ie. acceptable or must it always be i. e. ?
    I'm a computer programmer and have been using ie and eg for years in internal reports, emails, comments in the code, etc Where a spell-checker is hovering in the background I have just ignored i
  • adjectives - What do you call a person who thinks a lot? - English . . .
    Is there any specific word for a person who is always involved in processing a thought? I could find synonyms for 'deep thought' - contemplation, rumination and so on But I couldn't find if there
  • expressions - Why does one scream blue murder? - English Language . . .
    To scream blue murder is to shout loudly and make a huge fuss, sometimes with the implication that the fuss is excessive But does anyone know why murder should be blue?





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