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"Definite ninety-nine" - UK English meaning
british-english
slang
numbers
lyrics
Translating a scientific paper from American to British
american-english
british-english
science
Meaning of "no odds against success affected me"
meaning
meaning-in-context
idioms
british-english
sentence-meaning
Is "raises question marks over" a correct and common phrase?
phrases
american-english
british-english
"Keeping up with the car dash icons" - What's the pun?
british-english
puns
What word describes a university class in both the UK and the US?
single-word-requests
nouns
american-english
synonyms
british-english
AmEng equivalent for BrEng "decorator"
single-word-requests
american-english
british-english
dialectal-equivalent
How is "erm" pronounced in the UK, and why is it spelled that way?
pronunciation
british-english
orthography
interjections
Dissecting an English sentence using a pattern
british-english
sentence-patterns
technical
What informal and formal letter/e-mail closings are used the most? [duplicate]
grammar
british-english
letter-writing
Use of ! to convey sarcasm vs. emphasis
punctuation
british-english
writing
Is "know the drill" used in American English as well as UK English in a daily conversation?
american-english
british-english
transatlantic-differences
Meaning of the last paragraph ( in bold text ) [closed]
meaning
meaning-in-context
british-english
late-modern-english
"He's good police"
grammaticality
american-english
british-english
quantifiers
Is "Jack of Christ" a common Britishism for Jesus Christ?
british-english
euphemisms
vernacular
Am I understanding this sentence by Tolkien correctly?
grammar
british-english
Capitalization in mid-20th century British English
british-english
capitalization
twentieth-century-language
BrEng expressions to describe a man who is becoming stupid
expressions
idioms
british-english
pejorative-language
epithet-requests
Tete-a-tete commonly known in English? [closed]
expressions
american-english
british-english
phrase-usage
Why is it “knife” in the idiom, “Before you can say knife” though there are many shorter words than knife?
phrases
british-english
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