Stack Exchange
sign up
|
log in
|
English Language & Usage
Questions
Tags
Tour
Users
Ask Question
Andrew Vit
less info
meta user
|
network profile
1,116
reputation
1
3
14
bio
website
avit.ca
location
Squamish, Canada
age
36
visits
member for
2 years, 9 months
seen
May 7 at 7:25
stats
profile views
68
As an independent web developer and designer, I work with Ruby on Rails, PHP, SQL, and of course wrangle HTML and CSS.
1,116
reputation
bio
website
avit.ca
visits
member for
2 years, 9 months
1
3
14
badges
location
Squamish, Canada
seen
May 7 at 7:25
summary
answers
questions
tags
badges
favorites
bounties
reputation
activity
26
Answers
newest
activity
votes
17
Noun for “person with intermediate skill”
11
Can one “affect” change?
7
What is the word for the high-pitched “sex sound” a woman makes?
7
Word for “little insect”
5
What is the etymology of “Mexi-ducken”
5
Why “shrink” (of a psychiatrist)?
4
What's a more formal name for a “third” party?
4
How can I translate the words for the two types of bathrooms found in Russia into English?
4
What does “Japan-lite problems” mean?
4
Alternative colloquialism for “Best of both worlds”?
4
Which is correct: “expose” or “exposé”?
2
Difference between “alternate” and “alternative”
2
“Angry with” vs. “angry at” vs. “angry on”
1
Word for “watched” videos and “read” articles
1
How to use “summers ago”
1
“Told” vs. “said to” somebody
1
How should I say the “relationship” between the professor and student in America?
1
Word that means “Something only a philosopher would argue with”
1
“Pot calling the kettle black” … but what if the kettle isn't black (figuratively speaking)?
1
What would you call 'A person who is ready for support all the time'
0
Synonyms for “old” with positive connotations (and some conditions)
0
Measurements without a dimension (raw number)
0
“concern” instead of “business”; “operate” instead of “run”; “one” in front of a person?
0
Plurality of a group also referenced using we/our/us
0
“To ride a bicycle” vs. “ride a bicycle”
0
What does the British idiom “taking the piss” mean?
English Language & Usage Stack Exchange works best with JavaScript enabled