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While it was 6/11/03 2:44 pm throughout the UK, toty ... they fell thus: In theory, that means "son of" too. I thought "O'" means "grandson of". Where's Padraig? Edward MacLysaght, in his "Irish Families:
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I'd have said "on line" here. Comments? (In other words, can I start a Bunfight?) I wish you colonials would get with the programme on this one. It's a single word because "line" has effectively lost its meaning without
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On the BBC, in fact (1) (speaking personally, of course). Means 10 raised to the 18th power (no superscript on ... term for these prefixes? Apparently (3) they only run up to 10 to the 24th at the moment yotta-'. NIST refers to them as
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On the BBC, in fact (1) (speaking personally, of course). Means 10 raised to the 18th power (no superscript on UTF-8!) (2). What is the technical term for these prefixes? Apparently (3) they only run up to 10 to the 24th at the moment
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alt.usage.english
by
donna richoux
6 yr 27 days ago
Spelling, Hyphenation, Prefixes, Mistakes, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, United States, American, Writing, Punctuation, Languages, Styles
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Yes, it's taken 527 years but it was worth the wait. The British Library have finally got Caxton's original edition on-line http://www.bl.uk/treasures/caxton/homepage.html I'd have said "on line" here. Comments? (In other
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(snip) General Principle 1 Do not use a hyphen unless it serves a purpose. If a compound adjective cannot be misread or, as with many psychological terms, its meaning is established, a hyphen is not necessary. I maybe a quarter-agree
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