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  1. What does "xxi" mean? - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    Aug 6, 2015 · The " XXI " in capitals mean 21 in Roman numerals, but I don't think the lower-case letters " xxi " here also refer to 21. It seems that the sentence is well understood if the "xxi" is removed. …

  2. "By the way" in formal writing - English Language & Usage Stack …

    Oct 20, 2012 · Can I say "By the way" in an official document or professional meeting and other important/formal times? I never saw any film which would include these words.

  3. What part of speech is 'really' when it is spoken in a sentence on its ...

    Jun 2, 2024 · The word 'really' can be spoken in two ways, in a sentence on its own. Either in enthusiastic, and appreciative belief : You can run a hundred meters in 13 seconds. Really ? Or in …

  4. punctuation - What is the abbreviation for 'century'? - English ...

    Dec 5, 2013 · 0 I was taught XXI or 21c. for twenty first century. The most important part being that the reader understands the writers intention.

  5. etymology - What is the origin and meaning of 'lookit'? - English ...

    Sep 8, 2019 · ["Song XXI"] In these instances—and in quite a few others that appear throughout the nineteenth century— lookit is simply a variant of looked, presumably spelled as it is to represent the …

  6. Should the verb "impact" be always followed by "on"?

    Dec 22, 2018 · Nowadays, we often see the word impact being used as a verb. It has been a verb since the 17th century. 1601 P. Holland tr. Pliny History of the World II. xx. xxi. 73 The seed of this hearbe …

  7. send you or send it to you? - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    May 23, 2015 · Please, which phrase is correct: I have already finished the new recording; I will send you right now. I will send it to you right now.

  8. etymology - How much wood would a woodchuck chuck if a …

    Details: Woodchuck is used as an alternative name for groundhogs. The etymology of woodchuck suggests that the word is not related with "wood" and "chucking" and I think the tongue twister …

  9. Is there a term for "non-words" like "ha", "ugh", "huh", etc?

    Jan 22, 2020 · OED example of ugh - 1855 R. Browning Childe Roland xxi It may have been a water-rat I speared, But, ugh! it sounded like a baby's shriek. Does ^yuck" works with that one?

  10. Origin of "s--t-eating grin" - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    Jun 9, 2011 · In Book XXI of his History of Rome, Livy describes a Carthaginian sect of coprophages, the risus faecivorus, or shit-eating grin, being commonly displayed by its adherents. Although, its …