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  1. Why is "pineapple" in English but "ananas" in all other languages?

    Nov 7, 2013 · The question is: why did the English adapt the name pineapple from Spanish (which originally meant pinecone in English) while most European countries eventually adapted the name …

  2. Capitalization/Proper use of apostrophe for omitted letters at start of ...

    Sep 2, 2019 · 0 Suppose I have a character who can’t pronounce the letter b, and I have him start a sentence with “bananas” in dialogue. Is this correct, using a single quotation mark in front of a …

  3. Is there a specific term to describe someone who is religious but does ...

    Sep 25, 2025 · Is there a specific term to describe someone who is religious but does not necessarily believe everything that their religion teaches, and uses logic?

  4. Does "moving a meeting forward" mean the time will be earlier or later?

    Jun 21, 2020 · Suppose I say "We're moving the 12 PM meeting forward 2 hours", does that mean the meeting is at 10 AM or 2 PM?

  5. handwriting - Different versions of lowercase R - English Language ...

    Jul 27, 2020 · I use two different versions of lowercase R (often subconsciously) while writing in English for my studies. Is this something unacceptable in cases like exams or assignment submissions? No …

  6. Correct use of "hereby" on a formal letter [closed]

    Apr 10, 2019 · According to Merriam-Webster's Dictionary: hereby Adverb by this means Examples of hereby in a Sentence: I hereby declare the Olympic Games officially open. The sum will hereby be …

  7. prepositions - forbidden from or forbidden to - English Language ...

    Feb 27, 2024 · Opinions differ: FORBID, PROHIBIT These verbs are near synonyms, but they take different prepositions. Use to rather than from with forbid, and from rather than to with prohibit. Take …

  8. Should there be a space before a percent sign?

    Apr 8, 2017 · I will add that German standards, too, use a space (see DIN 5008, Duden, etc.), but it appears that barely any German is aware of that. The style guidelines of the German Wikipedia …

  9. Origin of "the likes of which X has [or have or had] never seen"

    Jan 6, 2022 · One of Donald Trump's favorite rhetorical flourishes was (and perhaps still is) the wording "the likes of which X has [or have] never seen." While president, he used it on a number of mem...

  10. Is the placement of "again" in the following sentence incorrect?

    Jul 29, 2020 · If a rule may be broken with impunity, is it a rule? Placing 'again' before the verb it modifies is in this example totally grammatical, but takes us into a highly formal register. But starting …