2
Points
Questions
1
Answers
10
-
Asked on December 22, 2021 in American english.
What’s more interesting is the antonym in the thesaurus answers here. Based on that, I’d go with antonyms of old school which bring up such terms as contemporary, fresh or in vogue. All of those terms, and especially the synonyms to in vogue work well.
The use of zeitgeist is pretty much in vogue today as the latest thing to discuss and to turn a phrase, “word drop”. How does my new friend who like Timegeist say?
- 268960 views
- 6 answers
- 99491 votes
-
Asked on December 22, 2021 in American english.
What’s more interesting is the antonym in the thesaurus answers here. Based on that, I’d go with antonyms of old school which bring up such terms as contemporary, fresh or in vogue. All of those terms, and especially the synonyms to in vogue work well.
The use of zeitgeist is pretty much in vogue today as the latest thing to discuss and to turn a phrase, “word drop”. How does my new friend who like Timegeist say?
- 268960 views
- 6 answers
- 99491 votes
-
Asked on December 22, 2021 in American english.
What’s more interesting is the antonym in the thesaurus answers here. Based on that, I’d go with antonyms of old school which bring up such terms as contemporary, fresh or in vogue. All of those terms, and especially the synonyms to in vogue work well.
The use of zeitgeist is pretty much in vogue today as the latest thing to discuss and to turn a phrase, “word drop”. How does my new friend who like Timegeist say?
- 268960 views
- 6 answers
- 99491 votes
-
Asked on December 21, 2021 in American english.
What’s more interesting is the antonym in the thesaurus answers here. Based on that, I’d go with antonyms of old school which bring up such terms as contemporary, fresh or in vogue. All of those terms, and especially the synonyms to in vogue work well.
The use of zeitgeist is pretty much in vogue today as the latest thing to discuss and to turn a phrase, “word drop”. How does my new friend who like Timegeist say?
- 268960 views
- 6 answers
- 99491 votes
-
Asked on December 21, 2021 in American english.
What’s more interesting is the antonym in the thesaurus answers here. Based on that, I’d go with antonyms of old school which bring up such terms as contemporary, fresh or in vogue. All of those terms, and especially the synonyms to in vogue work well.
The use of zeitgeist is pretty much in vogue today as the latest thing to discuss and to turn a phrase, “word drop”. How does my new friend who like Timegeist say?
- 268960 views
- 6 answers
- 99491 votes
-
Asked on December 21, 2021 in American english.
What’s more interesting is the antonym in the thesaurus answers here. Based on that, I’d go with antonyms of old school which bring up such terms as contemporary, fresh or in vogue. All of those terms, and especially the synonyms to in vogue work well.
The use of zeitgeist is pretty much in vogue today as the latest thing to discuss and to turn a phrase, “word drop”. How does my new friend who like Timegeist say?
- 268960 views
- 6 answers
- 99491 votes
-
Asked on December 20, 2021 in Other.
In this sentence:
Leaves from the ground fly like butterflies. They don’t fly until the air cleves get trapped there.
Can leaves be compared to anything?
- 273051 views
- 2 answers
- 100438 votes
-
Asked on March 26, 2021 in Single word requests.
While haughty tends to disdain those below him.
I understand that the idea of superiority is not intended but it would be understood that disdain of bad manners would strongly imply a connection between bad manners and the people who would employ them.
- 718319 views
- 6 answers
- 266541 votes
-
Asked on March 7, 2021 in Single word requests.
When will
you be able to call home for alcohol test? “RunLike A Hurricane” can say things such as “How can I drive to the other side?
- 1052146 views
- 8 answers
- 394249 votes
-
Asked on February 27, 2021 in Other.
If a noun requires an article to be grammatically correct within a sentence, it is required at the beginning of the sentence, and the article cannot be used in post position or in absence while retaining the sense of the noun.
There is no right way to make a Noun work, but if it is in a countable sense—one with needs an article or number—it must also have that article or number before the noun in the beginning of a sentence.
- 1260188 views
- 8 answers
- 430245 votes