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Is the word 'stroke' understood, in meaning one of these / \? [closed]
american-english
offensive-language
Origin of "the bird"
etymology
idioms
american-english
Where does "hot damn!" come from?
etymology
american-english
history
What led to the increased usage of "schtupping"?
american-english
usage
loanwords
yiddish
Where do people pronounce "ank" as /eŋk/ vs. /æŋk/?
american-english
pronunciation
dialects
Is the tense of my sentence correct? [closed]
american-english
past-tense
diffirence between "i have no..." and "i've got no..." [duplicate]
differences
american-english
british-english
formality
have-got
what is the difference between "hook up with" and "have sex with"? [closed]
differences
verbs
american-english
offensive-language
phrasal-verbs
How to state the negotiation failed? [closed]
differences
american-english
What does "We have the needle in this state, and we use it" mean? [closed]
phrases
idioms
american-english
What is the origin of the term "blockbuster"?
etymology
american-english
Take my word for it or take my word for this? [closed]
american-english
speech
Verbal constructions with "with" more common in AE than in BE
american-english
Correct English Grammar [closed]
grammar
american-english
I am looking for the term that describes words that are defined as "of or pertaining/related to ______" or "the study of_____". Thank you [closed]
american-english
terminology
"black ice" vs. "glare ice" vs. "glaze" in NAmEng
american-english
usage
dialects
north-american-english
vernacular
There is a note on the door and on it is written that
grammaticality
american-english
sentence
Health risk vs healthy risk
meaning
grammar
american-english
british-english
What is the origin of "breaking one's balls"?
american-english
slang
offensive-language
What is the origin of the American expression "s*** fire"?
etymology
american-english
british-english
north-american-english
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