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  • meaning - How to use the idiom in force - English Language Usage . . .
    This is one of times where English is very, very tricky! I believe in this particular usage, you want to use the idiom "in force" and the words "reinforce" and "enforce" in the following manners: "Each event has associated with it a tension weight The tension at a particular point in the story is obtained by adding all individual weights, in force [altogether, or, all at once], which
  • What is the accepted style for using a foreign term followed by its . . .
    How do you show a foreign term followed by its translation? Is the foreign term placed in quotation marks with its translation italicized or the other way around? Style guides favor but don't always
  • hyphenation - Should I use a hyphen, an en dash, or an em dash to . . .
    An en dash is different than a comma or em dash It is used to denote intervals, such as 6 - 12 eggs or 50 - 60 mph (I don't know how to insert an en dash in this text box, so imagine that that previous hyphen is an en dash ) To introduce a single term, a hyphen usually suffices if you want the whole structure to be a grammatical sentence
  • What is the rule for adjective order?
    @mcfedr: This is an English-language site, thus this question is limited to English All languages do have rules for word order Not necessarily remotely similar to the rules of English, but you certainly can't just slap any adjective at all after any adjective at all and call it a day
  • punctuation - Slashes for hyphens in compound modifiers - English . . .
    Take the phrase "a joint FBI-SFPD task force" for example According to my boss, a slash can stand in for the hyphen I tend to disagree Is this grammatically correct? Stylistically acceptable?
  • idioms - You have the watches, but we have the time - English Language . . .
    Probably referring to the fact that history has often seen a better-equipped, high-tec armed force defeated in the long term by a force employing guerilla warfare and prepared to play the long game
  • Word for: Repeatedly doing something you are scared of, in order to . . .
    20 If a child were scared of dogs, for instance, the parents would gently force them to stay around dogs so that they overcome their unnecessary fear, and in time it would become normal Is there a word in English (conversational or even formal English, but not psychological jargon) which refers to this mechanism?
  • Why does European packaging use gb to represent English?
    Further English language tags are: en-GB, en-GB-oed, en-CA, en-US These derive from Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) best practice, currently specified by RFC 5646 and RFC 4647, as language tags that are easy to parse by computer The IETF tag system is extensible to region, dialect, and private designations
  • Why was Spook a slur used to refer to African Americans?
    Spook was actually used by black people to refer to white people, presumably on the notion of “white” ghosts spook n [SE spook, a ghost] (US black) a white person 1939 [US] P E Miller Down Beat’s Yearbook of Swing n p : spook: a white musician 1944 [US] D Burley Orig Hbk of Harlem Jive 19: Us young homes, and lanes and hipstuds, gray and fay, and spook and spade (Green’s
  • A word for someone who seems unassuming and is overlooked, but turns . . .
    A dark horse seems to fit pretty well: someone or something initially not recognised as significant, later emerging unexpectedly as a major contender (For longer discussion and more referrences, see Wikipedia ) Comparing the nuances with other suggestions so far: sleeping giant suggests something which was clearly powerful all along, but was expected to remain dormant or otherwise uninvolved





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