P. O.'s user avatar
P. O.'s user avatar
P. O.'s user avatar
P. O.
  • Member for 10 years, 7 months
  • Last seen more than a month ago
  • Montreal, Canada
29 votes

Idiom for a person who is above any question

26 votes

Proverb meaning "to give something to somebody who does not recognize its value"

24 votes

What do you call this particular sitting position?

18 votes

A person who studies random things?

17 votes
Accepted

What does "third leg of the stool" mean?

11 votes
Accepted

What word can be used to describe 'not belonging to a country'?

10 votes

Why the “top” in “top hat”?

9 votes

One word for "temperature" and "humidity"

7 votes

What word did Middle English have in place of “light" as in: “light blue”, “light green” etc.?

7 votes

Translating the feeling and heritage of "Portugalidade" to proper English term

7 votes
Accepted

"it's all in the wrist"

7 votes
Accepted

What's the origin of "water under the bridge"?

6 votes

Is there a word which describes being unable to see the stars because of the brightness of the moon?

6 votes

Opposite of "titular"?

6 votes
Accepted

What is the origin of “cold weapon” in the sense of non-firearm?

6 votes
Accepted

Does the idiom "in check" come from chess?

6 votes
Accepted

What do you call a pair of words with opposite meanings that differ only by a prefix?

6 votes

Word for a person who is attracted to the depth of a character or one who likes deep conversation

5 votes

Word for a shadow's owner

5 votes

Personality that is loved extremely or hated extremely (word request)

5 votes
Accepted

Time Zone is a Region: what is the Word for 'currently using Daylight Savings' or not?

5 votes

"To science the sh*t out of something"

5 votes

English equivalent of "c'est gratuit"

5 votes
Accepted

Is the capital Y on "You" becoming a thing?

5 votes
Accepted

What is a word for a piece of cultural heritage?

5 votes

phrases: "marry a guy and he'll provide"

5 votes
Accepted

Is using "eager beaver" completely benign?

3 votes

Is there a term for two differently phrased sentences with the same meaning?

3 votes
Accepted

Translating from American to Canadian, when these are used as verbs, is it "log in" and "log out" or "login" and "logout"?

3 votes

Hypernym for "film" and "TV series"