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  • What is the meaning of in the realm of? [closed]
    2 realm A community or territory over which a sovereign rules; a kingdom A field, sphere, or province: the realm of science Knowing this, the phrase in the realm of is pretty straightforward Although I should mention, that it is often used in metaphorical sense, as in in the realm of dreams, meaning in the area, where the dreams rule
  • Realm vs Kingdom - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Kingdom and realm; an interesting question which demonstrates that language does not just operate under mechanical rules - although such are absolutely necessary - but that language is a living thing which grows, develops, adapts and matures My Oxford Dictionary of English [2nd Ed 2006] gives ‘kingdom’ - a realm associated with, or regarded as being under, the control of a particular
  • Why do people say over- and underwhelmed but never just whelmed?
    If a boat is whelmed it means that waves are coming right up to the gunwales, the tiptop of the sides of the boat, and some water is sometimes coming into the boat This is something you can cope with but isn't pleasant There seems to be little use for this word in a non-jargon or metaphorical sense When a boat is overwhelmed, water is just pouring over the sides and into the boat This is
  • idioms - What is the meaning of in the ether? - English Language . . .
    Ether, or æther, was the mysterious substance once thought to suffuse the universe and be the medium that propagated light (and radio waves once they were discovered) Before that, it was the material that suffused the realm of the Gods So, to say that something is in the ether means that it is something being communicated from place to place; it has no precise location, just as a radio
  • Is pronunciate a word? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    It is non-standard usage If you want a (prescriptive) guide to standard American usage (in other words, a dictionary that will tell you what most people think is the "right" word to use in formal writing), the American Heritage Dictionary is a good resource If you are looking for a descriptive dictionary that will tell you what most people actually use, the Merriam-Webster family of
  • synonyms - Non gender-specific alternative to layman - English . . .
    'layperson' works as a non-gender-specific version, and is a common modern substitute for 'layman' 'laywoman' sounds weird what are you trying to use 'layperson' for? If you're trying to distinguish from an IT expert, software developer, technically educated person, 'layperson' doesn't seem right It usually refers to people outside of the church hierarchy, the military of police, the
  • How do definitions of words imbue meaning? [closed]
    This process continues until we can define everything that we do So the definitions imbue meaning by appealing to the concepts associated that we have to the defining words, which are then fundamentally, after some number of steps based on something foundational and "simple"
  • meaning - Preternatural vs supernatural - English Language Usage . . .
    I am wondering what the precise differences between preternatural and supernatural are I know praeter is Latin for beyond so that preternatural literally means beyond natural But how exactly
  • Perdition vs Hell - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Definitions are those of the New Oxford American Dictionary: perdition: (in Christian theology) a state of eternal punishment and damnation into which a sinful and unpenitent person passes after death hell: a place regarded in various religions as a spiritual realm of evil and suffering, often traditionally depicted as a place of perpetual fire beneath the earth where the wicked are punished
  • What does beyond mean in the following? - English Language Usage . . .
    When used as in the examples, 'beyond' carries a sense of something existing or operating in an entirely different realm of concern, or measure, as though requiring a different scale, a different method of both apprehending and comprehending, from that required by the 'mere'





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