| bio | website | h-e-m-m-e.blogspot.com |
|---|---|---|
| location | ||
| age | 39 | |
| visits | member for | 2 years, 9 months |
| seen | Mar 18 '12 at 16:03 | |
| stats | profile views | 7 |
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Oct 4 |
awarded | Taxonomist |
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Aug 23 |
awarded | Yearling |
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Mar 18 |
awarded | Critic |
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Feb 18 |
comment |
Differences between “vulgar” and “coarse”, “crass”, “crude”, “rough”, “rude”, “unrefined” as applied to language By the way, something similar happened in Italian language: "volgare (a.)", from Latin "vulgus (n.), common people", nowadays means "rude". |
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Feb 18 |
accepted | Difference between “to grab” and “to grasp” |
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Feb 18 |
comment |
What does “I fort” stand for? yep... typo removed |
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Feb 18 |
revised |
What does “I fort” stand for? removed typo |
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Feb 18 |
accepted | What does “I fort” stand for? |
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Feb 18 |
asked | What does “I fort” stand for? |
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Feb 18 |
comment |
Difference between “to grab” and “to grasp” I bet that "RTFM" answers could be applied to a large part of the questions posted on this site. Nonetheless, there are kind people who answer anyway :-P |
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Feb 18 |
comment |
Difference between “to grab” and “to grasp” From Oxford Dictionary of English: grasp: seize and hold firmly. grab: grasp or seize suddenly and roughly. I suspect there are subtle differences but being a non-native speaker I cannot figure out. |
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Feb 18 |
asked | Difference between “to grab” and “to grasp” |
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Aug 3 |
answered | Etymology and meaning of “discretionary” |
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Jun 2 |
accepted | Impugned and pugn'd |
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Jun 2 |
awarded | Editor |
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Jun 2 |
asked | Impugned and pugn'd |
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Aug 6 |
accepted | What's wrong in this question? |
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Aug 5 |
awarded | Scholar |
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Aug 5 |
awarded | Student |
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Aug 5 |
asked | What's wrong in this question? |