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  1. EN: however - adverb placement | WordReference Forums

    Mar 4, 2008 · 1) "This modelling assumption however is too a large extent surprising." More generally, what are the rules regarding where to write them? I guess it is correct to write: 2) However, this …

  2. academic goose-flesh - WordReference Forums

    May 29, 2016 · I guess I shouldn't even try to understand what Aldous Huxley meant when he wrote "...a harsh thin light glared through the windows, hungrily seeking some draped lay figure, some pallid …

  3. faire la meuf - WordReference Forums

    May 8, 2019 · context: “j’veux pas faire la meuf mais j’ai archi trop chaud” guess: “i don’t want to be slutty but i’m super horny”

  4. play-doh/playdough | WordReference Forums

    Dec 24, 2004 · Qué quiere decir play doh? la frase es la siguiente: "a Mexican nanny whose Play-Doh skills were in better order than her paperwork " Muchas gracias

  5. 2-year or 2-years - WordReference Forums

    Jun 27, 2010 · Last night when I used a sentence when I talked to someone. "I am two-year younger than you." But today I asked one of my friend,he responsed it shall be "I am two-years younger than …

  6. plastilina + goma eva | WordReference Forums

    Aug 10, 2006 · I know this is an old post but I'd like to point out that Plasticine is a brand of modelling clay, and that the plastilina we know in Spanish is an oil-based modelling clay. As for Foamy, Fomy, …

  7. Dagnubit [dagnabbit, dangnabbit, dag nabbit] - WordReference Forums

    Jul 19, 2012 · I know it as dagnabbit or possibly dangnabbit, and it's out there with consarnit and dadburnit as 19th-century US minced oaths - which I probably picked up mainly from Warner Bros. …

  8. today's meeting or today meeting - WordReference Forums

    Apr 10, 2020 · I am trying to mention something raised in the meeting I had with one of my colleagues. Which of the following phrases is correct and more natural? 1- In...

  9. Rota (verb)? Roster (noun and verb). | WordReference Forums

    Aug 7, 2008 · Rota is a distinctly British English word to me. I hear it on shows like "The Office", but I have never heard it in an American English setting. As I have heard it used, it might be: "Everyone …

  10. Far out to come in when the wind shifts - WordReference Forums

    Jan 13, 2020 · I don't think it can be (1), and I don't entirely agree with your (2). The old man is clearly going to go "far out". "To come in when the wind shifts" suggests to me that he will need the wind to …