| bio | website | |
|---|---|---|
| location | ||
| age | ||
| visits | member for | 1 year |
| seen | 9 hours ago | |
| stats | profile views | 18 |
|
Jun 8 |
awarded | Famous Question |
|
Jun 7 |
awarded | Yearling |
|
Mar 9 |
awarded | Nice Question |
|
Jan 19 |
awarded | Notable Question |
|
Nov 11 |
awarded | Popular Question |
|
Aug 4 |
awarded | Constituent |
|
Jul 23 |
awarded | Caucus |
|
Jul 19 |
comment |
How to pronounce “favicon”? I always have called it fav-ih-con with analogy to rubicon or necronomicon. Both of those are derived from icon, I think, but drop the eye sound |
|
Jul 4 |
accepted | Why was the ruler of the British Empire not an Emperor/Empress? |
|
Jul 4 |
comment |
Why was the ruler of the British Empire not an Emperor/Empress? but never styles her/his self that way... I suppose that makes sense. It is strange that the British will refer to themselves as the British Empire but not call their monarch an empress officially, but I guess thats just historical. |
|
Jul 4 |
asked | Why was the ruler of the British Empire not an Emperor/Empress? |
|
Jun 28 |
answered | What is the right sign to show in a retail shop |
|
Jun 19 |
answered | Can I separate events with period to form past perfect? |
|
Jun 16 |
comment |
What causes a verb to be infinitive only? Only as a negative unwittingly, which is certainly odd. As in, "He was my unwitting pawn", followed by "No, he was acting quite wittingly." I haven't really seen it used without an unwitting close at hand. |
|
Jun 16 |
comment |
What causes a verb to be infinitive only? It is interesting that "unwitting" is still in use, but not "witting". |
|
Jun 16 |
comment |
What causes a verb to be infinitive only? @Matt I know that. I was pointing out that if to spite was conjugated in the same way it would be spit or spote. |
|
Jun 16 |
revised |
What causes a verb to be infinitive only? added 13 characters in body |
|
Jun 16 |
accepted | What causes a verb to be infinitive only? |
|
Jun 15 |
comment |
What is the proper term for names typically assigned to people in countries using the first-middle-last format? That only is with respect to order, not with respect to 2-part and 3-part. It doesn't clarify if someone has a middle name. |
|
Jun 15 |
comment |
Objects with no name, like “the Sun” @FumbleFingers Earth's moon is most often called Luna in sci-fi. |