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So, you intended "he was seen by the dead" to mean "he was seen near the dead"???!! Okay, I must say that I feel we've been taken advantage of. Maybe I've misunderstood again, but it seems as though you have
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"Ultimately, as Churchill concluded about Russia, the key to unlocking the Korean riddle /mystery/enigma lies in the determining its national interest.'
If it were upto me, I would say the key to unlock something, so why the -ing
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That works, I think. This describes a general truth. I think the sentence comes from a common riddle about a fox, a hen, and some grain.
You could also say, 'the hen will eat the grain.'
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Hi, This seems to be a kind of riddle. ie How many people are playing tiddlywinks? Let me offer you a couple of thoughts, so that you can then think about this paragraph a bit more. When you play tiddlywinks, you make your tiddlywink jump up in
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i see your point. here is the entire block of ... somewhere? thx a lot, it's a hard riddle for me... Use a definition of "camp" along the lines of the following: Main Entry: 3camp Function: noun Etymology: origin unknown 1 ...
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i see your point. here is the entire block of text, from which the context could be seen: "Following on ... does this sound reasonable or did i miss a point somewhere? thx a lot, it's a hard riddle for me... "Camp", eh, and not
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Why is it that, in English, when we write a sentence of the form "My name is (name) ... of nine Roman letters that spell "Juuitchan". So why do we write as in A, and not as in B? B is logically correct. However, in ordinary English
alt.usage.english
by
joe fineman
5 yr 291 days ago
Sentences, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Usages, Writing, Languages, Word Games, Riddles, Longest Words, Numbers
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