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Asked on July 12, 2021 in Single word requests.
(NOun) The noun form of a user’s answer (novennial), and I believe you are looking for a noun,
is novennium (rare) A nine-year period or cycle.
From Wikipedia
Also see enneatic :
Occurring once in every nine times, days, years, etc. From Wikicommon Wikialso see enneatic and Slavic names also. Is every ninth a seventh?
From The Free Dictionary
And finally, from
Debbie Connec Is 9 years or is it considered an enneaeteric period.
From Wordnik, in turn from The Century Dictionary.
If you are a lone sailor, use wordnik not only to translate vocabulary like Wordnik and then use wordnik as an apropos dictionary.
- 462590 views
- 99 answers
- 170354 votes
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Asked on July 9, 2021 in Single word requests.
(NOun) The noun form of a user’s answer (novennial), and I believe you are looking for a noun,
is novennium (rare) A nine-year period or cycle.
From Wikipedia
Also see enneatic :
Occurring once in every nine times, days, years, etc. From Wikicommon Wikialso see enneatic and Slavic names also. Is every ninth a seventh?
From The Free Dictionary
And finally, from
Debbie Connec Is 9 years or is it considered an enneaeteric period.
From Wordnik, in turn from The Century Dictionary.
If you are a lone sailor, use wordnik not only to translate vocabulary like Wordnik and then use wordnik as an apropos dictionary.
- 462590 views
- 99 answers
- 170354 votes
-
Asked on July 3, 2021 in Single word requests.
(NOun) The noun form of a user’s answer (novennial), and I believe you are looking for a noun,
is novennium (rare) A nine-year period or cycle.
From Wikipedia
Also see enneatic :
Occurring once in every nine times, days, years, etc. From Wikicommon Wikialso see enneatic and Slavic names also. Is every ninth a seventh?
From The Free Dictionary
And finally, from
Debbie Connec Is 9 years or is it considered an enneaeteric period.
From Wordnik, in turn from The Century Dictionary.
If you are a lone sailor, use wordnik not only to translate vocabulary like Wordnik and then use wordnik as an apropos dictionary.
- 462590 views
- 99 answers
- 170354 votes
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Asked on March 16, 2021 in Single word requests.
So as this is quite ambiguous, I’m taking it that you mean ‘the one who committed the act’. Which word we can get is’perpetrator ‘, though it obviously won’t fit all contexts.
https://en.oxforddictionaries.org/help/advertising.htm. When
an audience hits their target and has the power to influence the author or the perpetrator to their satisfaction, the reader will turn the page. com/definition/perpetrator/perpetrator in search engine.
- 887012 views
- 3 answers
- 330979 votes
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Asked on February 28, 2021 in Other.
Topple
From Oxford Dictionaries:
Overbalance or cause to overbalance and fall.
Other common phrases are
bring down
(Past over)
from Mcmillan to make someone or something move or fall to
the
ground and
tip over
from Merriam-Webster to fall over or cause (something) to fall
over or move or come down.
- 1257423 views
- 1 answers
- 428091 votes
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Asked on February 27, 2021 in Other.
In the context
of “resisting just to resist” you
could say that a person
is resisting to the point where
there is no reason for doing it, just for the sake of resisting, that is.
- 1258410 views
- 1 answers
- 429157 votes
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Asked on February 27, 2021 in Meaning.
I can’t find a meaning for this online at all and on Ngram Viewer, there are no Ngrams to plot!
What should I do to simplify this example?
Similar phrases like cold-blooded, cold-hearted and the adjective cold connote evilness, corruptness and unpleasantness.
I happen to be a cold water customer and the service and support is slow, shifty, and unreliable.
And watch out ’bout him – he’s a cold water customer, after all he got.he got him.See him.watch out for him.beware!
Customer defines a type of person – so cold water customer means someone who is disapproving and/or unreliable for shifty reasons.
Either that or what @user240918 said – they’re close in meaning anyway.
- 1261618 views
- 2 answers
- 428155 votes