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Asked on March 22, 2022 in Single word requests.
If second person is used in English as “to sit,” it is an archaic formal formal past tense of “to
sit” and should not be used in current English.
- 41367 views
- 251 answers
- 15035 votes
-
Asked on March 22, 2022 in Single word requests.
If second person is used in English as “to sit,” it is an archaic formal formal past tense of “to
sit” and should not be used in current English.
- 41367 views
- 251 answers
- 15035 votes
-
Asked on March 22, 2022 in Single word requests.
If second person is used in English as “to sit,” it is an archaic formal formal past tense of “to
sit” and should not be used in current English.
- 41367 views
- 251 answers
- 15035 votes
-
Asked on March 21, 2022 in Single word requests.
If second person is used in English as “to sit,” it is an archaic formal formal past tense of “to
sit” and should not be used in current English.
- 41367 views
- 251 answers
- 15035 votes
-
Asked on March 21, 2022 in Single word requests.
If second person is used in English as “to sit,” it is an archaic formal formal past tense of “to
sit” and should not be used in current English.
- 41367 views
- 251 answers
- 15035 votes
-
Asked on March 21, 2022 in Single word requests.
If second person is used in English as “to sit,” it is an archaic formal formal past tense of “to
sit” and should not be used in current English.
- 41367 views
- 251 answers
- 15035 votes
-
Asked on March 20, 2022 in Single word requests.
If second person is used in English as “to sit,” it is an archaic formal formal past tense of “to
sit” and should not be used in current English.
- 41367 views
- 251 answers
- 15035 votes
-
Asked on March 20, 2022 in Single word requests.
If second person is used in English as “to sit,” it is an archaic formal formal past tense of “to
sit” and should not be used in current English.
- 41367 views
- 251 answers
- 15035 votes
-
Asked on March 19, 2022 in Single word requests.
If second person is used in English as “to sit,” it is an archaic formal formal past tense of “to
sit” and should not be used in current English.
- 41367 views
- 251 answers
- 15035 votes
-
Asked on March 19, 2022 in Single word requests.
If second person is used in English as “to sit,” it is an archaic formal formal past tense of “to
sit” and should not be used in current English.
- 41367 views
- 251 answers
- 15035 votes