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Asked on October 23, 2021 in Single word requests.
X is a recrimination :
an angry statement in which you accuse someone in your neighborhood who’s accused or criticized you. As
Tonepoet mentions in the comments below, one who recriminates is a recriminator. While the definition of a recriminator perfectly fits the person you describe, the word’s rarity makes me hesitate to recommend making use of it ( recrimination is more
common).
- 329255 views
- 448 answers
- 120624 votes
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Asked on October 21, 2021 in Single word requests.
X is a recrimination :
an angry statement in which you accuse someone in your neighborhood who’s accused or criticized you. As
Tonepoet mentions in the comments below, one who recriminates is a recriminator. While the definition of a recriminator perfectly fits the person you describe, the word’s rarity makes me hesitate to recommend making use of it ( recrimination is more
common).
- 329255 views
- 448 answers
- 120624 votes
-
Asked on October 21, 2021 in Single word requests.
X is a recrimination :
an angry statement in which you accuse someone in your neighborhood who’s accused or criticized you. As
Tonepoet mentions in the comments below, one who recriminates is a recriminator. While the definition of a recriminator perfectly fits the person you describe, the word’s rarity makes me hesitate to recommend making use of it ( recrimination is more
common).
- 329255 views
- 448 answers
- 120624 votes
-
Asked on October 21, 2021 in Single word requests.
X is a recrimination :
an angry statement in which you accuse someone in your neighborhood who’s accused or criticized you. As
Tonepoet mentions in the comments below, one who recriminates is a recriminator. While the definition of a recriminator perfectly fits the person you describe, the word’s rarity makes me hesitate to recommend making use of it ( recrimination is more
common).
- 329255 views
- 448 answers
- 120624 votes
-
Asked on October 20, 2021 in Single word requests.
X is a recrimination :
an angry statement in which you accuse someone in your neighborhood who’s accused or criticized you. As
Tonepoet mentions in the comments below, one who recriminates is a recriminator. While the definition of a recriminator perfectly fits the person you describe, the word’s rarity makes me hesitate to recommend making use of it ( recrimination is more
common).
- 329255 views
- 448 answers
- 120624 votes
-
Asked on October 20, 2021 in Single word requests.
X is a recrimination :
an angry statement in which you accuse someone in your neighborhood who’s accused or criticized you. As
Tonepoet mentions in the comments below, one who recriminates is a recriminator. While the definition of a recriminator perfectly fits the person you describe, the word’s rarity makes me hesitate to recommend making use of it ( recrimination is more
common).
- 329255 views
- 448 answers
- 120624 votes
-
Asked on October 19, 2021 in Single word requests.
X is a recrimination :
an angry statement in which you accuse someone in your neighborhood who’s accused or criticized you. As
Tonepoet mentions in the comments below, one who recriminates is a recriminator. While the definition of a recriminator perfectly fits the person you describe, the word’s rarity makes me hesitate to recommend making use of it ( recrimination is more
common).
- 329255 views
- 448 answers
- 120624 votes
-
Asked on October 16, 2021 in Single word requests.
X is a recrimination :
an angry statement in which you accuse someone in your neighborhood who’s accused or criticized you. As
Tonepoet mentions in the comments below, one who recriminates is a recriminator. While the definition of a recriminator perfectly fits the person you describe, the word’s rarity makes me hesitate to recommend making use of it ( recrimination is more
common).
- 329255 views
- 448 answers
- 120624 votes
-
Asked on March 6, 2021 in Phrases.
Been is the past participle of Be so I’ve never been is as grammatical as I’m not. No object can be omitted from meaning, according to context.
Why don’t you feel like you’re in France? What did you do in France? Is I im a sarcastic girl and I’m an outcast? Does
your average height mean you’re tall and skinny? So as a New Zealander: I am certainly not, nor have I “been” in my life (about 15 years). In
the most technical sense, I’m not certain whether omitting the object of a to be verb can be considered grammatical”, but it is, in any case, a commonly used and accepted manner of expression.
- 1065100 views
- 1 answers
- 400029 votes