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  • Shot or shooted - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Shooted is an obsolete, nonstandard simple past tense and past participle of shoot (source) You should not use this form Shot is proper It's still used sometimes, but it's really obsolete Example: He took his gun and shooted people just like, from one block of LePlaza and two blocks from the main police station of PAP — The Huffington Post, “Georgianne Nienaber: Senator Leahy Calls
  • meaning - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    What is the difference between screen shot and screenshot, Where do we use screen shot and screenshot? Are they used interchangeably?
  • What is the etymology of the term cheap shot?
    As the title suggests, I am curious where the term came from A twenty-minute Google search did not yield any useful results More specifically, I am wondering why the word "cheap" was used
  • Which is correct: troubleshooted or troubleshot?
    Troubleshooted is not a word, but troubleshot is Is this really the correct word to use? I always feel like saying: I troubleshooted it vs I troubleshot it For some reason, it just doesn't
  • grammar - He shot it versus he shot at it - English Language . . .
    He shot it explicitly states that he shot it (the bullet pierced the target) It also could mean that he fired a gun if it is representing a firearm He shot (fired) the gun (it) He shot at it only has one meaning; it means that the gun was aimed and fired at a target It doesn't give any indication of whether the target was hit or not The difference is subtle, but they mean different things
  • How did phobia ever come to mean hatred? - English Language Usage . . .
    Phobia: (Etymonline): "irrational fear, horror, aversion," 1786, perhaps on model of similar use in French, abstracted from compounds in -phobia, from Greek -phobia, from phobos "fear, panic fear, terror, outward show of fear; object of fear or terror," originally "flight" (still the only sense in Homer), but it became the common word for "fear" via the notion of "panic, fright" I think that
  • punctuation - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Is the Gaussian spherical? spherical-Gaussian-based approximations Are approximations spherical? spherical Gaussian-based approximations If it is your proposition that a spherical fellow named Gaussian did base his approximations in order to calculate this analytically (unlikely, but hey), then spherical Gaussian based approximations
  • Double parentheses - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Possible Duplicate: Is it acceptable to nest parentheses? Are you allowed to have parentheses within parentheses in English? Something like "(I did that because I wanted to (and the want cam
  • capitalization - Masters degree — capital M or not? - English . . .
    When someone states "I have a Masters in Computer Science" should the word masters have a capital M? I've seen arguments for both and can't determine which is correct
  • Meaning and usage of be of - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    I see such sentences all the time and I'd like to learn more about their grammatical structure (e g how they are described in grammatical terms), their meaning and how to use them in different con





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