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  • What is the meaning of paint it black and when to use it?
    I just realized that "Paint it Black" (the song) is the Stones' re-working of Funeral Blues by WH Auden: "Stop all the clocks, cut off the telephone, Prevent the dog from barking with a juicy bone, Silence the pianos and with muffled drum Bring out the coffin, let the mourners come The stars are not wanted now; put out every one, Pack up the moon and dismantle the sun, Pour
  • Is it correct to say What was your name??
    Idiomatically, it's quite common for people to ask "What was your name?" even in contexts where both they and you know perfectly well that you haven't already given your name (and thus that they can't possibly have "forgotten" it) Sometimes the past tense can be "explained" by saying the speaker isn't sure whether the name has already been given Other times we might suppose if the speaker is
  • expressions - Why has everyone started saying it is what it is? And . . .
    Few expressions anger me more than "it is what it is" It sounds so incredibly dumb to me And I keep hearing it lately, from all kinds of people: Any sentence goes here It is what it i
  • What is the meaning of the phrase what it is they do?
    A typical example might be "I don't know [what it is they do]", where the bracketed element is an interrogative clause (embedded question) that can be glossed as "I don't know the answer to the question 'What is it (that) they do?'"
  • Is it correct to ask What degrees is it outside? [closed]
    No, it isn't correct to ask "What degrees is it outside?" You have several options to find out what temperature is You know the temperature outside? (coloquial) What's the temperature outside? If it is very cold: "How cold is it outside?" If it is very hot: "How hot is it outside? In the last two examples, even though you're not asking what temperature is, the answer will probably be
  • What kind of stuff is it? vs What kind of stuff it is?
    The correct form is "What kind of stuff is it?" This is because the order of the subject and verb is reversed in a question
  • Is it what it looks like or how it looks like?
    Irrespective of the context, it is either "what it looks like" or "how it looks", not "how it looks like" However, let me add that as much as it is grammatically incorrect, you can find any number of occurrences of the phrase in daily use You will not see "how it looks like" in the writing of learned English users, though According to Google nGram, "how it looks like" is hardly used in
  • Whats the difference between: Is it ok for you?, and: Is it ok with you?
    Neither of these sentences are grammatically correct on their own And the second sentence would probably not work in context either I think the phrase that you are looking for is: Is that OK with you? Hopefully this is helpful, also, I suggest posting in ELL with questions like these I think the moderator will move this there
  • What is it called when you change a well known quote to suit your . . .
    Thanks all I was thinking "paraphrasing", but I felt like paraphrasing was essentially shortening a quote to get the original point across in less simpler words, while keeping the meaning and context the same Thank you for the definitions to clarify my understanding
  • What is the origin of the phrase its a horse apiece?
    The Word Detective, after confirming the phrase isn't "it's a horse of peas", said in 2000: "A horse apiece" means, as you supposed, "more or less equal" or "six of one, half dozen of the other " Field researchers for The Dictionary of American Regional English (DARE) first heard "a horse apiece" in 1980, but the phrase is undoubtedly much older A similar phrase, "horse and horse," dates back





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