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  • Origin of the word whee - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    What is the origin of the word whee, used as an interjection to express enjoyment or delight? The only information I can find is that it is "natural exclamation" first recorded in the 1920's
  • How do you spell hoo-wee! - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Following up on Joe Blow's suggestion in a comment above, I also found Google Books matches for hoohee, hoo-whee (and hoowhee), whohee, whoohee, whoowhee, whowhee, woohee, and woowee
  • is Where are you going to? correct - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    "Where are you going to" seems to be quite popular among foreign learners whose mother tongue is German That's probably because in German, "Where are you going" (wo gehen Sie) would be wrong, the correct form being wo gehen Sie hin So those people try to mimic that hin in English by adding a to (though, of course, technically hin is not a preposition, but rather a part of the split-up
  • word usage - Dont S**t Where You Eat - English Language Usage . . .
    The idiom "Don't shit defecate where you eat" means: One should not cause trouble in a place, group, or situation in which one regularly finds oneself [Wiktionary] I always understood what it
  • What is the difference between 20$ and $20? [closed]
    I am seeing both 20$ and $20 usages (20 is nonessential to this question ) What is the difference between them?
  • Etymology of corny - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Why do we call dull, old-fashioned or banal things corny? As in corny movie scenes or corny jokes; not, vegetable or corn related characteristics This blog article I found on Google suggests it
  • what are the origins of hi, hey, hello? - English Language Usage . . .
    The question of the etymology of hello is a fascinating puzzle According to the the OED it was originally an Americanism derived from the British hallo which has its origins in the Old German "halâ, holâ, emphatic imperative of halôn, holôn to fetch, used especially in hailing a ferryman " However other dictionaries (such as Dictionary com) cite an origin in the Romance word "hola", an
  • What is correct to say: next time or the next time?
    The next time I will meet you Next time I will meet you I think both are correct, but do both sentences indicate different meaning?
  • Is it affected to pronounce the h in wh- words such as what?
    As others have noted, w (h)ether you should pronounce "wh" as w or ʍ depends on what the prevailing regional accent does The big exception to this is singing; it pays to be fussy about pronunciation when you sing, even if you wouldn't in normal speech, because it helps the words to come through the texture Incidentally, you shouldn't think of ʍ as sounding like "hw" ʍ is an
  • etymology - What is the origin of holy smoke? - English Language . . .
    According to the OED, using holy with another word as an oath or expletive dates back to 1785 with Holy Willie, "a hypocritically pious person" This trend continues with other words, like cow and moses The first recorded instance in the OED of holy smoke is from 1892 in the book Naulahka by Kipling and Balestier It was used again in 1920 in Bulldog Drummond by Sapper





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