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  • What is the difference between till and until?
    In a nutshell, they can be used interchangeably in most situations, with the obvious exception of fixed phrases such as "Till death do us part" Some people will object to "till" (as being too informal or whatever), but only for entirely made-up reasons (such as that "till" is a careless abbreviation of "until" or something, which is simply wrong; "till" is actually the older of the two words
  • What is the origin of the phrase til the cows come home?
    Christine Ammer, The Facts on File Dictionary of Clichés, second edition (2006) has this entry for the phrase "not until the cows come home": not until the cows come home Not for a long time Presumably the time referred to is when cows return to the barn for milking The term has been around since the late sixteenth century Beaumont and Fletcher's play The Scornful Lady (1610) stated, "Kiss
  • Since, until, from, to on invoices or date ranges of a form
    Which is the correct form on an invoice, or a general date range in a form, and why? Monkey dolls 12 GBP From 2012-01-03 to 2013-01-02 Monkey dolls 1
  • Up to now vs until now - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Up to - used for various points and measures to describe a certain segment (not necessarily time E g fill the container up to 500 ml mark) Until till - used to describe a lapse of time before a certain point in time (E g we waited until sunset - i e waiting is the lapse between now and sunset) For your example sentence, I would suggest: Currently at the moment, the job has been completed
  • What is the difference between ‘Is it free’ and ‘Is it on the house?’
    It is possible that the awkwardness was due to the local standards of etiquette, rather than the language; i e it may be that they understood the meaning of the phrase very well, but perceived it as indelicate to explicitly ask whether something is on the house
  • What do you call a person that goes to extreme ends to accomplish a goal?
    I've been trying to find a single word that describes a person that will go to extreme ends to achieve a goal For example, a person that would harm friends or leave behind a path of destruction t
  • grammaticality - Are collective nouns (and in particular companies . . .
    american-english These company names are collective nouns In general, in American English collective nouns almost always trigger singular verb agreement (after all, "Microsoft" is grammatically a singular noun, even if semantically it denotes an entity made up of many people) It is apparently much more common to use plural verb agreement in British English It doesn't have anything to do
  • Whats a term for someone who held a position thats in the process of . . .
    I am was the Vice President of Finances for a club at my university Over the summer, someone new was elected who will become the new VP Finances The position is still being transferred, meaning t
  • What is the origin of the phrase beyond the pale?
    Pale in this idiom comes from Latin pālus 'stake'; it means a fencepost, and by ordinary extension it also means the fence itselt, and the area it contains or delimits So beyond the pale just means "outside the boundaries" Normally, of course, the "boundaries" are metaphors for human activities, rather than referring to a physically bounded location
  • Whats the origin of the word geezer? - English Language Usage . . .
    "Geezer" actually means an odd or eccentric man This word came from guise, which was: (in Scotland and N England) the practice or custom of disguising oneself in fancy dress, often with a mask, and visiting people's houses, esp at Halloween The above is the origin of guiser Thus, it was used in slang to describe someone as odd, and it was pronounced "geezer" due to as you said, the Cockney





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