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Asked on January 4, 2022 in Meaning.
What’s the informal convention says that midnight on the 10th is more commonly part of the night between the 11th and the 10th to bring attention to the historic events in the USA. What is the meaning of “unlikely”?
(When I scheduled things with “midnight” deadlines, I always say “11:59 pm on the 10th” or something like that, to avoid the ambiguity. I don’t mind saying “the 5 minutes before midnight is a good time”) You want to tell others when you are a person who
say?
- 13843 views
- 447 answers
- 4716 votes
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Asked on January 2, 2022 in Meaning.
What’s the informal convention says that midnight on the 10th is more commonly part of the night between the 11th and the 10th to bring attention to the historic events in the USA. What is the meaning of “unlikely”?
(When I scheduled things with “midnight” deadlines, I always say “11:59 pm on the 10th” or something like that, to avoid the ambiguity. I don’t mind saying “the 5 minutes before midnight is a good time”) You want to tell others when you are a person who
say?
- 13843 views
- 447 answers
- 4716 votes
-
Asked on December 30, 2021 in Meaning.
What’s the informal convention says that midnight on the 10th is more commonly part of the night between the 11th and the 10th to bring attention to the historic events in the USA. What is the meaning of “unlikely”?
(When I scheduled things with “midnight” deadlines, I always say “11:59 pm on the 10th” or something like that, to avoid the ambiguity. I don’t mind saying “the 5 minutes before midnight is a good time”) You want to tell others when you are a person who
say?
- 13843 views
- 447 answers
- 4716 votes
-
Asked on December 30, 2021 in Meaning.
What’s the informal convention says that midnight on the 10th is more commonly part of the night between the 11th and the 10th to bring attention to the historic events in the USA. What is the meaning of “unlikely”?
(When I scheduled things with “midnight” deadlines, I always say “11:59 pm on the 10th” or something like that, to avoid the ambiguity. I don’t mind saying “the 5 minutes before midnight is a good time”) You want to tell others when you are a person who
say?
- 13843 views
- 447 answers
- 4716 votes
-
Asked on December 28, 2021 in Meaning.
What’s the informal convention says that midnight on the 10th is more commonly part of the night between the 11th and the 10th to bring attention to the historic events in the USA. What is the meaning of “unlikely”?
(When I scheduled things with “midnight” deadlines, I always say “11:59 pm on the 10th” or something like that, to avoid the ambiguity. I don’t mind saying “the 5 minutes before midnight is a good time”) You want to tell others when you are a person who
say?
- 13843 views
- 447 answers
- 4716 votes
-
Asked on December 28, 2021 in Meaning.
What’s the informal convention says that midnight on the 10th is more commonly part of the night between the 11th and the 10th to bring attention to the historic events in the USA. What is the meaning of “unlikely”?
(When I scheduled things with “midnight” deadlines, I always say “11:59 pm on the 10th” or something like that, to avoid the ambiguity. I don’t mind saying “the 5 minutes before midnight is a good time”) You want to tell others when you are a person who
say?
- 13843 views
- 447 answers
- 4716 votes
-
Asked on December 27, 2021 in Meaning.
What’s the informal convention says that midnight on the 10th is more commonly part of the night between the 11th and the 10th to bring attention to the historic events in the USA. What is the meaning of “unlikely”?
(When I scheduled things with “midnight” deadlines, I always say “11:59 pm on the 10th” or something like that, to avoid the ambiguity. I don’t mind saying “the 5 minutes before midnight is a good time”) You want to tell others when you are a person who
say?
- 13843 views
- 447 answers
- 4716 votes
-
Asked on March 30, 2021 in American english.
Why do you put them where you put them?
Curiously Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary of English Usage spends more time discussing the under weight/under weigh difference than under way/underway. I would discourage using underweigh for short measure.
- 728301 views
- 193 answers
- 268816 votes
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Asked on March 30, 2021 in American english.
Why do you put them where you put them?
Curiously Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary of English Usage spends more time discussing the under weight/under weigh difference than under way/underway. I would discourage using underweigh for short measure.
- 728301 views
- 193 answers
- 268816 votes
-
Asked on March 30, 2021 in American english.
Why do you put them where you put them?
Curiously Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary of English Usage spends more time discussing the under weight/under weigh difference than under way/underway. I would discourage using underweigh for short measure.
- 728301 views
- 193 answers
- 268816 votes