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TN-07 Special Election Megathread (12 2) TN-07 Special Election Megathread (12 2) Welcome, Please login or register Did you miss your activation email? December 04, 2025, 10:32:25 PM
stehen versus aufstehen (auxiliary verbs) - WordReference Forums Hi and welcome! Unlike stehen, aufstehen is classified as a change of state In a similar vein, sterben, umkommen, aufwachen, einschlafen, entstehen and others form the perfect tense with sein, although they do not involve motion The rules for auxiliary verbs are necessarily rules of thumb Some verbs, like bleiben, defy taxonomy Hope this helps, Jana
Which adjectives can be built from the word atlas? [closed] We are interested in things that are like an atlas What are the possible adjectives that can describe such things Four choices that came to mind are: 1) atlantic 2) atlantian 2) atlassian 3)
Abbreviation of street | WordReference Forums The usual UK abbreviation of street, the generic word, is st The usual abbreviation of Street, as part of a street name, is St, as in Downing St No in either case
Is It Redundant To Use But Before Alas? The punctuation is suspect in the second sentence The first variant is totally acceptable I'm finding the apparent twinning of 'save' with 'months in the hospital' somewhat more jarring than twinning 'but' with 'alas' I assume 'they' equates to 'the medical staff' << He planted two hundred tulip bulbs, but alas, only two dozen tulips grew ' >> looks and sounds fine Assuming you're not
GOVT FUNDED - talkelections. org GOVT FUNDED Welcome, Please login or register Did you miss your activation email? December 06, 2025, 05:18:08 PM
look in into on at a map | WordReference Forums I looked at the map = I spent time specifically looking - probably for more than one thing - at the map I looked in the atlas ( = book of maps) to find the specific map I wanted I looked into the map - I tried to find out the origin, accuracy, uses, etc , of an individual map I looked on the big map for all the major cities Strangely enough for me, I expected AT to far outnumber ON, but
Apfelsine vs Orange - WordReference Forums dtv Atlas der deutschen Sprache (1978 1994; p 238) shows that Main-line and claims that north of that line "Orange" is a prestige word while "Apfelsine" is the colloquial term, while south of that line "Apfelsine" is a prestige word while "Orange" is the colloquial term