mohit | Shared With: Everyone - Jan 09 2009 | bachelor party, australia, language, english
How to say bachelor party in "other languages":
Quoted: A bachelor party (United States, South Africa)—also known as a stag party, stag night, or stag do (UK, Ireland, Canada, and New Zealand); bull's party (South Africa); or buck's party or buck's night (Australia)—is a party held for a bachelor shortly before he enters marriage, to make the most of his final opportunity to engage in activities a new partner might not approve of, or merely to spend time with his friends (often in his wedding party afterwards).
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mohit | Shared With: Everyone - Oct 01 2008 | english, phrases, email, writingShareViewed: 11 Times
mohit | Shared With: Everyone - May 31 2007 | language, english, grammar
Nice.
Quoted: Examples of retronyms are acoustic guitar (coined when electric guitars appeared), or Parallel ATA (necessitated by the introduction of Serial ATA) as a term for the original Advanced Technology Attachment. World War I was called The Great War until World War II. The advent of satellite radio has prompted the term terrestrial radio.
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mohit | Shared With: Everyone - Dec 05 2006 | hindi, english, uk, india, language, hinglish
Heard about this on NPR yesterday morning.
Quoted: Baljinder Mahal is the author of the book <em>The Queen's Hinglish</em>, a guide to the blending of Hindi and English by Indian immigrants to the U.K. She meets with Rob Gifford in the town of Derby in central England for some practical lessons in Hinglish.
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mohit | Shared With: Everyone - May 20 2006 | english, government, politics, news
Quoted: The Senate voted to make English the ``national language'' of the U.S. as part of legislation overhauling immigration policy. The measure, approved by a vote of 63-34, directs the government to ``preserve and enhance'' the role of English, without altering current laws that require some government documents and services be provided in other languages.
mohit | Shared With: Everyone - Mar 04 2006 | english, punctuation
more on acronyms and apostrophes. seems like dropping the apostrophe is *slightly* preferred.
Quoted: In the several years I've been researching acronyms, I have not found many hard set rules where acronyms are concerned. As long as you follow ...
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mohit | Shared With: Everyone - Mar 04 2006 | punctuation, english




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