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- Would I say I can sometimes. . . or I sometimes can. . .
Sometimes I can spell complicated words without needing the spellchecker! A lot of the time, I'd say that the version you choose will depend on the word you want to emphasize
- Where to put sometimes in a negative sentence?
0 They don't sometimes play tennis at a club on Sundays They sometiems don't play tennis at a club on Sundays So, which sentence is correct? Where should we put frequency adverbs like "sometimes" in a negative sentence?
- expressions - Sometimes a * is just a * meaning and history - English . . .
What kind of expression is it when someone says "Sometimes a horse is just a horse" or "Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar" (Which apparently Freud never actually said)? What is the history of this
- writing - Why are numbers sometimes spelled out and then numerals . . .
Why are numbers sometimes spelled out and then numerals specified as well? [closed] Ask Question Asked 14 years, 8 months ago Modified 13 years, 2 months ago
- When is Y a vowel? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
In school we are taught the vowels: A, E, I, O, U, and sometimes Y Today's XKCD got me thinking about when the letter Y is considered to be a vowel I understand (perhaps incorrectly) that in w
- Sometimes it does, sometimes it doesnt - English Language Usage . . .
You know, just saying "Sometimes it happens" already tells you that something happens sometimes and other times it doesn't But, sometimes, I need to make very clear that this "something" doesn't happen always
- phrases - Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar -- meaning? - English . . .
The quote simply states that, although thanks to Freud everybody may be thinking that every more or less phallic-shaped object is a phallic symbol and has some deeper psychological meaning, sometimes a cigar is just a cigar, in other words, sometimes there is no deeper meaning or message to things
- Whats the history of the English letter Y as a sometimes vowel?
Wondering when and why historically the Anglo-Saxon letter "Y" became a (part-time) vowel substitute for the letter "I", leading to "gymnasium" instead of "gimnasium" or "cyanide" instead of "ciani
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