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  • phrases - What does you are getting reamed mean? - English Language . . .
    3 "Getting reamed", is slang for being fucked hard, in one hole or another It is just a grosser, more exaggerated form of the slang "getting screwed", meaning to be taken advantage of, mistreated or abused
  • Meaning of get a serious reaming - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    The idiom is derived from military jargon meaning to ream out the bore of a gun or artillery piece The act of reaming is a harsh cleaning out of the inside of the gun, with a heavy swab, to remove any residues from previous firings A "serious reaming" can affect the lands and grooves of the barrel, so a serious reaming is not something you do often, just in cases of absolute necessity
  • The wrought wreaked havoc misunderstanding
    The phrase wrought havoc is the past tense of work havoc In 1900, the two most common phrases were "wrought havoc" and "work havoc" So it's the phrases wreak havoc and wreaked havoc that were introduced because of the misunderstanding
  • terminology - Is there a term for the device of repeating the exact . . .
    It's probably best to post (before someone else does) then search for your answer in possible duplicates Contrastive focus reduplication is a more tractable search element than device of repeating the exact same word twice immediately to emphasize its sincerity or power? If an obvious duplicate, you can delete your own answer
  • What is the correct abbreviation for the word numbers?
    What is the correct abbreviation for the words numbers and number? Nos No Nos No Possible example usage: "Number of guests" where the word number is abbreviated "Numbers 10–15 are located in the
  • Is over-exaggerated correct English?
    My initial thought is that over-exaggerated implies not only exaggerating, but exaggerating in a way that is excessive for the given context, or exaggerating to the point of absurdity So, saying something like The fish was 5 feet long! I would consider exaggerating, but something like the fish was a million feet long! would be over-exaggerating
  • Is it togglable or toggleable? - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    The dialect is American English, but I'd be interested to know if this varies between dialects Is it"togglable" or "toggleable"? Because neither dictionary com, webster com, nor Outlook's spelling
  • Ellipsis or Ellipses? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Inspired by this question: What is the correct term to use when describing the "three dots" ( ), ellipsis or ellipses? And are either of these terms considered plural? For example, if I wanted
  • Man is to womanizer as woman is to what?
    What's the feminine version of womanizer? Your title and question are a bit contradictory Reading the title, I inferred that the question was a man womanizes a female so what do you call a female that womanizes a male However, the question implies what is a woman that womanizes; I wasn't aware that womanizing was gender specific As opposed to (what the title led me to believe the question
  • word choice - Angry with vs. angry at vs. angry on - English . . .
    I am a South-Indian and I was recently confused about this usage - "angry on" vs "angry with" vs "angry at" someone I understand that "angry with" someone is the correct usage However I realized that "angry on someone" is a direct translation from Tamil, a South Indian language





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