| bio | website | stackexchange.com/users/… |
|---|---|---|
| location | North America | |
| age | 51 | |
| visits | member for | 1 year, 6 months |
| seen | Jan 14 '12 at 4:53 | |
| stats | profile views | 11 |
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Jan 14 |
comment |
When should I use “a” vs “an”? Thanks to you, I have now overgrown my browser's capacity for bookmarks. My family will be complaining even more now that I have further escapes to seize! LOL |
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Jan 7 |
answered | “Despite the fact” implies knowledge of said facts |
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Jan 7 |
awarded | Supporter |
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Jan 7 |
comment |
Adjective/adverb that means “seemingly clever, but actually foolish” @FumbleFingers Actually, the OP has not only added a hyphen; the base word is different: one ending in -uous; the other with -ious. I think that may have been deliberate. |
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Dec 31 |
awarded | Teacher |
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Dec 31 |
answered | “Could you please” vs “Could you kindly” |
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Dec 31 |
answered | Is this usage of “know to be” correct — “They want to eat food they know to be good for them”? |