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meaning - Is there a difference between treble and triple . . . According to the Cambridge Corpus of American English, Americans strongly prefer triple as an adjective, noun and verb British and Australian writers, on the other hand, seem to use both triple and treble, but with treble more frequent as a verb and triple as a noun and adjective Fowler distinguished between treble meaning that something had become three times as large in size, and triple
Where does the expression triple-A come from? The term "AAA" or "triple-A" is a term mainly used nowadays in the video game industry, according to Wikipedia, for video games produced and distributed by a mid-sized or major publisher,
Are there examples of triple entendres in English? There are many triple entendres in HipHop, although not respected by most writers and english enthusiasts, HipHop has produce some of the most wittiest lines I've personally ever heard
etymology - What is the origin of the counting prefixes: uni-, bi- di . . . You are correct, they are from Latin and Greek, we have simply inherited terms from both There is a good reference for Latin and Greek roots over at Wikipedia: Uni meaning one: un-, uni- one language of origin: Latin etymology: unus, unius examples: unary, union Bi Di meaning two: bi- two language of origin: Latin etymology: bis, "twice"; bini, "in twos" examples: binoculars, bigamy, biscotti
word choice - Is triple the proper counterpart of pair when . . . 'Triple' can be used as an adjective: triple crown in horse racing, triple score in a video game, a triple scoop for an ice cream cone As a noun or adjective, triple is probably the best of all the examples (the others have more context restricted usage)
Is there a word analogous to dual for three or more options? Re above suggestions: triple and three-fold have the connotation of identical instances or a multiplication of a single instance, which dual does not (They also have the limitation of being related to double and twofold ) Three-way has connotations of some sort of physical object or direction, that I don't want either
Equivalent of both when referring to three or more items? What would be the correct word to use when referring to three or more items, in the same manner as the word both? For example, using two words, with the word both: "There are several recommendat
Why is a 100% increase the same amount as a two-fold increase? Innumeracy is the explanation I've read A one-fold increase should mean a 100% increase, but current usage sticks its tongue out and gives a raspberry to math, just as it does to semantics when people say things like "That begs the question 'Does your chewing gum lose its flavour on the bedpost overnight?'"