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How do you handle that that? The double that problem Have you ever had a case where you felt compelled to include strange things like a double that in a sentence? If so, then what did you do to resolve this? For me, I never knew whether it was accep
How exactly was the long S used and why did people stop using it? Pioneer of type design John Bell (1746–1831), who started the British Letter Foundry in 1788, commissioned the William Caslon Company to produce a new modern typeface for him and is often "credited with the demise of the long s " (Wikipedia)
A figure of speech to illustrate the irreversibility of an action Personally I like "You can't unring that bell" as deadrat mentioned above The phrase refers to the fact that you can't un-hear a bell that has been rung There's a nice essay about its history here: Unring the Bell (impossibility of taking back a statement or action)
colloquialisms - Words are not sparrows; once they have flown they . . . The bell, once rung, cannot be unrung or You cannot unring the bell Google books traces "cannot be unrung" to 1924: what is learned or suspected outside of court may have some influence on the judicial decision It may be only a subtle or even subconscious influence, but a bell cannot be unrung Adverse claimants have at least some reason to fear By 1948 it is in the Utah bar
Where does the phrase Aint no thang but a chicken wang come from? 2) Anything from the 1960s and 1970s "Bell-bottom pants, platform shoes, that's Old School " 3) A reference to a seasoned veteran or a person highly experienced in something (older usage); probably derived from African Americans' stress on the significance of life and living as a teacher, the "school" of experience
Underpants on the outside - English Language Usage Stack Exchange There is a bit of a history behind this The Guardian cartoonist Steve Bell used the allegation by Alastair Campbell that he had observed (John) Major tucking his shirt into his underpants to caricature him wearing his pants outside his trousers, as a pale grey echo of both Superman and Supermac, a parody of Harold Macmillan Wikipedia ["Super-Mac" was from a 1958 cartoon image of Harold