English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

Words & Wordplay - December 2006

[Selected]: All categories Education & Reference Words & Wordplay

Six..sixth. Etc..............!

2006-12-14 19:50:01 · 7 answers · asked by citizen high 6

2006-12-14 19:44:09 · 1 answers · asked by ricky n 1

2006-12-14 19:37:08 · 16 answers · asked by tinymonkey83 1

2006-12-14 19:06:06 · 4 answers · asked by sincere12_26 4

2006-12-14 18:52:41 · 5 answers · asked by damodharan c 1

this sentence is in one of my school books, so its gotta be correct, but why??? as long as I know its alwyays been : doing a reserach ON, not into

" THEY ARE DOING RESEARCH INTO THE EFFECTS OF SMOKING ON PEOPLE'S HEALTH"

2006-12-14 18:27:14 · 4 answers · asked by whatevar 2

2006-12-14 18:24:03 · 18 answers · asked by G K 2

Which is more appropriate in this clause:

"where a person’s clique and social status grew *utmost* in importance".

I'm leaning towards utmost, but maybe someone who's a grammar king or queen can tell me why (or why not)?

2006-12-14 18:08:28 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous

2006-12-14 17:46:54 · 2 answers · asked by Anonymous

2006-12-14 17:27:00 · 4 answers · asked by lime 1

hu? hu? ;D

2006-12-14 17:15:42 · 7 answers · asked by léidibug 2

2006-12-14 17:06:11 · 10 answers · asked by nanabe 4

How to pronounce this german word(in writing also)

Fronhofer(it was in some other language & it's the closet sound I can spell in english)

thanks for your time

2006-12-14 16:49:53 · 2 answers · asked by Anonymous

2006-12-14 16:22:34 · 10 answers · asked by Anonymous

2006-12-14 16:21:24 · 14 answers · asked by nageh bakheet 1

2006-12-14 16:01:45 · 9 answers · asked by Anonymous

I know they don'tmean my physical lips. LoL. But when talking about my personality I had to people that said I act like I have such a stiff upper lip at times.

I htought that was a reference for British people. Lol. I am not British.

What does it mean, exactly?

2006-12-14 15:59:21 · 7 answers · asked by Anonymous

You ask a question,, not AXE IT ! What the hell is that?

2006-12-14 15:48:49 · 15 answers · asked by DORY 6

my sources say there is no word in the english launguage that does. can someone think of a famous person, place, or common word from another launguage?

2006-12-14 15:41:58 · 16 answers · asked by whatifitoldyou i was a ninja? 2

2006-12-14 15:25:38 · 5 answers · asked by GAWD 2

Please- just give me any wordS that you can think of that have to do with a vacation. I have already used interstate highway, lane (traffic), cruise, foreign, sight, tourist, resort, and relax. Thank you for your help!!!

2006-12-14 15:09:16 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous

I've never really understood what people mean when they say "The exception that proves the rule." Can anyone help?

2006-12-14 15:04:31 · 4 answers · asked by Donna M 6

i think it refers to poisoning!what do u think?

2006-12-14 14:59:30 · 2 answers · asked by Mr.cool guy 1

what type of English is used in the play Romeo and Juliet?
i think it's called Queen Elizabethian english.. something like that. how do you spell it? does anybody know for sure what it is called?
thanks in advance!!


p.s. its NOT called "old english"

2006-12-14 14:58:11 · 5 answers · asked by ashley y 2

This is a last name of a person, but what does it mean when translated in English?

2006-12-14 14:44:16 · 2 answers · asked by if80 2

2006-12-14 14:35:50 · 10 answers · asked by Anonymous

2006-12-14 14:22:26 · 21 answers · asked by Maria A 1

This is kinda weird, a guy that I rejected called me a sperm whale. What's that suppose to mean lol? Just wondering, because there's a type of whale named that and I just don't get it. What's he trying to say here?

2006-12-14 14:20:34 · 9 answers · asked by Jenny 2

fedest.com, questions and answers