2
Points
Questions
1
Answers
67
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Asked on December 22, 2021 in Single word requests.
I would say that your friend is “frank to a fault. Defined
as “used to modiy an adjective which describes some desirable or otherwise positive characteristic” etc.
- 270535 views
- 14 answers
- 99373 votes
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Asked on December 21, 2021 in Single word requests.
I would say that your friend is “frank to a fault. Defined
as “used to modiy an adjective which describes some desirable or otherwise positive characteristic” etc.
- 270535 views
- 14 answers
- 99373 votes
-
Asked on December 20, 2021 in American english.
“Casting a vote” is now a “figure of speech” for voting.
In the old days, yesteryear, one could vote by filling out a one line form, and “casting” it into a voting receptacle.
“As of 2017, voter votes are
recorded using the internet. And why not…?”
- 275138 views
- 4 answers
- 100305 votes
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Asked on December 20, 2021 in American english.
Let’s say it’s the same as any other time. The context, of the 1960s, was a bit unusual in many ways.
How? Between the Vietnam War and the birth control revolution of 1959 and 1961, birth control laws were passed. “Make love and not war,” meant roughly, “don’t go to war (and kill Vietnamese) when you have such an attractive alternative with your female peers. What this ethos was occasioned by the incline of the “baby boom” that, as a result, more women born in the 1950s for (slightly older) men born
in the 1940s.
- 280355 views
- 67 answers
- 103394 votes
-
Asked on December 19, 2021 in American english.
“Casting a vote” is now a “figure of speech” for voting.
In the old days, yesteryear, one could vote by filling out a one line form, and “casting” it into a voting receptacle.
“As of 2017, voter votes are
recorded using the internet. And why not…?”
- 275138 views
- 4 answers
- 100305 votes
-
Asked on December 18, 2021 in American english.
Let’s say it’s the same as any other time. The context, of the 1960s, was a bit unusual in many ways.
How? Between the Vietnam War and the birth control revolution of 1959 and 1961, birth control laws were passed. “Make love and not war,” meant roughly, “don’t go to war (and kill Vietnamese) when you have such an attractive alternative with your female peers. What this ethos was occasioned by the incline of the “baby boom” that, as a result, more women born in the 1950s for (slightly older) men born
in the 1940s.
- 280355 views
- 67 answers
- 103394 votes
-
Asked on December 16, 2021 in American english.
Let’s say it’s the same as any other time. The context, of the 1960s, was a bit unusual in many ways.
How? Between the Vietnam War and the birth control revolution of 1959 and 1961, birth control laws were passed. “Make love and not war,” meant roughly, “don’t go to war (and kill Vietnamese) when you have such an attractive alternative with your female peers. What this ethos was occasioned by the incline of the “baby boom” that, as a result, more women born in the 1950s for (slightly older) men born
in the 1940s.
- 280355 views
- 67 answers
- 103394 votes
-
Asked on December 13, 2021 in American english.
Let’s say it’s the same as any other time. The context, of the 1960s, was a bit unusual in many ways.
How? Between the Vietnam War and the birth control revolution of 1959 and 1961, birth control laws were passed. “Make love and not war,” meant roughly, “don’t go to war (and kill Vietnamese) when you have such an attractive alternative with your female peers. What this ethos was occasioned by the incline of the “baby boom” that, as a result, more women born in the 1950s for (slightly older) men born
in the 1940s.
- 280355 views
- 67 answers
- 103394 votes
-
Asked on December 13, 2021 in American english.
Let’s say it’s the same as any other time. The context, of the 1960s, was a bit unusual in many ways.
How? Between the Vietnam War and the birth control revolution of 1959 and 1961, birth control laws were passed. “Make love and not war,” meant roughly, “don’t go to war (and kill Vietnamese) when you have such an attractive alternative with your female peers. What this ethos was occasioned by the incline of the “baby boom” that, as a result, more women born in the 1950s for (slightly older) men born
in the 1940s.
- 280355 views
- 67 answers
- 103394 votes
-
Asked on December 12, 2021 in American english.
Let’s say it’s the same as any other time. The context, of the 1960s, was a bit unusual in many ways.
How? Between the Vietnam War and the birth control revolution of 1959 and 1961, birth control laws were passed. “Make love and not war,” meant roughly, “don’t go to war (and kill Vietnamese) when you have such an attractive alternative with your female peers. What this ethos was occasioned by the incline of the “baby boom” that, as a result, more women born in the 1950s for (slightly older) men born
in the 1940s.
- 280355 views
- 67 answers
- 103394 votes