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hey, I wonder where the phrase " , where art thou?" comes from. And could anyone explain the meaning to me as well, although I can imagine it. I've seen it quite often recently in different variations, like in the movie "O
General English Vocabulary & Idiom Questions
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anonymous
194 days ago
Negatives, Translation, Context, Relationships, Speaking, Colours, Countries, Business, United States, American, References, Career, Speeches, Expressions, Negations
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(Do you think I'll ever find out which came first, the verb or the verbal?)
You may not find out which came first but you'll certainly learn their meanings here:
ver·bal adj.
1. of or pertaining to words: verbal
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Or so one historian *claims.* I'm willing to bet your source had an anti-Catholic axe to grind. Wow you leap to this quickly. It's a really strong Catholic position these days, it seems: any criticism must be the result of
misc.writing.screenplays.moderated
by
ron
3 yr 295 days ago
Translation, Languages, Countries, Speaking, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Plants, Speeches, Tips, Teaching, Analogies, Context, Scholarship
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David Wright Sr. wrote on 21 Feb 2005: David Wright Sr. wrote on 20 Feb 2005: Sure, informally. ... good to be true is unambiguous and not advertising jargon. See my reply to John Ings. Unabiguity would be a valid reason, but I am speaking of
alt.usage.english
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cybercypher
5 yr 29 days ago
Hyperboles, Translation, Context, Sentences, Friendships, Usages, Speaking, Chat, Writing, Speeches, Poetry, Numbers
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No, I don't, Jan
alt.usage.english
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cybercypher
5 yr 225 days ago
Marriage, Translation, Business, Context, Relationships, United States, American, Speaking, Writing, Careers, References, Career, Speeches, Numbers, Expressions
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I'm a high school student taking college courses in spanish and love learning new languages. Im looking for a native spanish speaker to practice my conversational skills and I'd love to help someone practice their english.
alt.usage.english
by
wayne brown
5 yr 225 days ago
Regards, Marriage, Translation, Constructions, Context, Sentences, Relationships, Usages, Speaking, Students, Speeches
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Perhaps "invented" isn't quite the right word, but every written language has gone through a stage where a formal literary ... so, as you suggest, the period Shakespeare-KJV Bible does represent a fairly rapid establishment of what
uk.culture.language.english
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mike stevens
6 yr 94 days ago
Spelling, Translation, Dates, Vocabulary, Speaking, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Writing, Context, Speeches, Languages
- English Test
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