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meaning - Is it alright or allright? - English Language Usage . . . COCA BNC all right 59013 6384 alright 1888 8328 allright 36 3 This suggests that alright is much more popular in Britain than in the US However, the Corpus of Historical American English paints the following picture: X axis: year, Y axis: incidences per million words
All right vs. alright - English Language Usage Stack Exchange Is it “alright” or “allright”? Which is correct in English, "all right" or "alright"? These expressions don't cause any problem in verbal communication but I confuse them while writing To be frank, I sometimes use "all right" and sometimes "alright" without actually knowing which one is correct
What is the difference between ok and alright? What is the difference between "ok" and "alright" Do the two words have the exact same meaning? If not, what is the difference? Is the difference reflected only according to different usages in
greetings - Whats an appropriate response to a British person asking . . . Part of the key to this is matching the length of response to the length of greeting 'y'alright?' or just 'alright' tends to be said as an acknowledgement in passing and mostly isn't a conversation opener or and invitation to stop and chat
Where did the second `L` in alright go? [duplicate] Possible Duplicate: Which words may start with ldquo;al- rdquo;? The word alright comes from "all right" Where did the second l go? Similarly: altogether from "all together"
How can I politely express that I have understood? When my professor instructs me during his her office hour, I may simply show my understanding by "Got it" or "I see" But I wonder how to say that politely and professionally in written English,
Neither do I Nor do I Me neither Me either To make it plain, Ephren gave a good sum up of the question However, despite the right observation from Armen concerning the "Me" part in "Me neither", we use in US : Me either ; Me neither ; Nor do I
How did “way to go” come to mean “well done”? Green’s Dictionary of Slang lists the exclamation way to go! as a short form of that’s the right way to go, noting that it may have been coined for the 1940 American biographical film Knute Rockne All American, which tells the story of Notre Dame's legendary football coach Knute Rockne