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  1. About that matter, Etymonline says of the use of the Latin cum preposition: The sexual cum seems to have no connection with Latin cum, the preposition meaning “with, together with”, which is occasionally used in English in local names of combined parishes or benifices (e.g. Chorlton-cum-Hardy), in popular Latin phrases (e.g. cum laude), or as a combining word to indicate a dual nature or ...

  2. 21 de dez. de 2010 · The OED dates "have at" to the 14th century: V 27 b. intransitive.With at. To go at, esp. aggressively or forcefully; to tackle or attack; (also) to make an attempt at, ‘have a go at’.

  3. 1. In your example there is no substantial difference if at is substituted by in. However at conveys ambiguity when not used with a nation since, for example, a spectator can also be at but not in. I would argue that, if you described a nation as being at the Olympics, most would assume participation.

  4. 26 de nov. de 2017 · 0. No. Swapping changes the meaning. Further on in time, means looking at a time that is further from the present (than a previously referenced time). Looked on further in time - one wouldn't use that because "look on" has a different idiomatic meaning. You could, however, say something like "Kept looking further back in time.."

  5. 16 de mai. de 2017 · When writing English, one often uses Latin terms, such as exemplī grātiā, opere citātō, and id est, but in abbreviated forms, "e.g.", "op. cit.", and "i.e.".

  6. In the examples you make, there is no need to use any preposition. We can get together Wednesday night. Since there was nothing I could do, I wandered downtown the night of Christmas Eve.

  7. for the moment Also for the present; for the time being. Temporarily, during the period under consideration, for now. [Examples omitted.] The first term dates from the late 1800s, the first variant from the mid-1500s, and the second variant from the late 1400s. So, according to Ammer, "for the time being" came first (late 1400s), followed by ...

  8. 14 de fev. de 2015 · I did a google search for 'come around to you' , 'come around to yours', 'come around to your place'.

  9. 19 de ago. de 2023 · The answer by Heartspring, as well as the question itself, have already explained well why 'there is zero historical basis for pronouncing ye with a /j/ sound'.

  10. 7 de out. de 2014 · A friend asked me earlier why it was that "gay" is an adjective, but "lesbian" is a noun. I've been doing some searching online because it's an interesting question. According to

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