Ricky's Profile

4
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Questions
2

Answers
58

  • Asked on March 25, 2021 in Meaning.

    A hinge is the jointed device or flexible piece on which a door, gate, shutter, lid, or other attached part turns, swings or moves, depending on the load of the hinge. The hinge is a mechanical element. It should be used for a wide variety of uses.

    How do hinges will prevent slipping on doors?

    If a door hinges fail, it turns to flim and creaks, creating chaos.

    What with unhinged is chaotic, crazy and total chaos.

    Can the introduction of an large amount of money into a matter drive everyone mad with greed, resulting in things becoming unhinged (totally chaotic).

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  • Asked on March 25, 2021 in Meaning.

    It’s a bit of a gray area, but strictly speaking, “will end effective on such-and-such date” would mean that the matter in question will have ended on that date. What exactly happened to you while you were in the service? By that date your service will not be deactivated. Dates: Come up before the date.

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  • Asked on March 10, 2021 in Meaning.

    What is a word? Is it an idea?

    If you wish to spice it up, you could add, “Where the woodbine twineth.? ” “Everyday

    life does an excellent job. “

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  • Asked on March 10, 2021 in Synonyms.

    Even though Centennial is associated mostly with Celebration, would be a decent option here. Strictly speaking, it mean, “occurring once a century. ” The

    derivatives include bicentennial

    (two centuries) tricentennial

    (three centuries) and

    finally, quadricentennial (four centuries).

    Your sentence could run what follows: the tallying

    up of quadricentennial changes can be a lot of fun.

    What is a good topic to learn about the theory of “Peaceful Thinking”?

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  • What will be your go-to guy all the time?

    What are journalists like to call athletes, though.

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  • Asked on March 2, 2021 in Other.

    What nuances do you have that are interesting to experience? He

    calls Peter’s phone. See. You dialed the number. Obviously you did call him ‘Ballada’, and we did call him, but then you could not call him “Ballada” in his Name, and you knew he wasn’t. Is he stupid enough to have no idea about my voice and picked up my phone?

    What happened between Peter and you when it happened in a fell out? How did you not call him back? You didn’t. Period.

    I said it “this morning” because it’s still this morning, is it a thing?

    If I plan to call Peter before noon, you could say: I

    haven’t called Peter yet.

    If Peter is dead, who do you hope calls me the next morning? Would you find that unusual? If you know what I mean.

    I hope this helps.

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  • Asked on March 2, 2021 in Single word requests.

    Is it funny how you ask that?

    Philosophy means “love of wisdom” in the original Greek language. As a nation, it encompassed many entities that today are viewed as separate disciplines. Certainly the famous line from William Shakespeare’s Hamlet would indicate that back in Shakespeare’s time philosophy still included natural sciences, though not necessarily art and literature:

    There are more things in Heath and land, Horatio,
    Than are dreamed of in your philosophy.

    After natural sciences, besides natural sciences, was religion made a separate discipline. In modern times, theology and philosophy became separate from each other.

    I’m afraid there’s no specific word that would describe a person who actually studied (i.e. other studies). I’m afraid there is no word that would describe a person who does study (i.e. other schools) at college. I have a working familiarity with (working, whichever discipline out there) every possible discipline out there.

    e.g. a

    pansophist is a person who claims or pretends to have studied

    everything. a

    polymath is someone who is versed in more than one discipline, but not necessarily

    both.

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  • Asked on February 28, 2021 in Other.

    It is from an aria in the Third Act of Rigoletto by Giuseppe Verdi (Francesco Maria Piave wrote the libretto): La donna

    u00e8 mobile Qual piuma
    al vento, muta d’accento
    e di
    pensiero.

    Sempre un amabile,
    leggiadro viso,
    in pianto o in riso,
    u00e8 menzognero.

    The standard English translation runs as follows:

    Female fickle Like
    a feather in the wind, Her
    voice keeps changing, And
    so do her thoughts.

    Always a lovely
    face.
    In tears and in laughter
    Equally untrue.

    Luciano Pavarotti’s concert piece: https://youtu../

    IjVJ1lIoUBwn

    WP/OJVmjUwJ5GAjlvpluJvSwNn?

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