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  • Where does blah meaning idle talk come from?
    Bla! Bla! What absurd ideas some people have 1848 - The Santa Fe Republican (Santa Fe, NM) 15 Oct 3 4; Baby talk A few other early examples use "bla" to describe baby-talk, setting up the possibility that it was first used to describe meaningless talk from an infant and grew from that to refer to idle or meaningless talk generally
  • orthography - Is blah blah blah the most common spelling? - English . . .
    bla bla bla ; bla bla; My question stems from when I first wrote it as "bla bla bla" in an English text, but a friend told me it should have been written as "blah blah" so I decided to ask here Before that I had checked it out on some online English dictionary and Google search but I wasn't able to clear it out
  • Any other way of saying blah blah blah - English Language Usage . . .
    @TerryLiYifeng: Oh As to meaning, it is mimicking someone talking a lot, in a deprecatory manner It is often a hand gesture that goes along with 'yadda yadda yadda' or 'blah blah blah' (but not at all with 'etc etc etc') or behind someones back when one is bored with their incessant blather
  • Etymology of black - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    In Old English, at least according to the online Old English Translator, there were two words, the adjective blæc, which meant black and the adjective blac, which meant pale, shining, white, along with the related verb blæcan, which meant to whiten, bleach
  • Whats an idiom for something that youve heard many times?
    Also consider old bromides and old platitudes as terms for often-repeated phrases or stories From wiktionary, bromide means “A platitude [eg] We hoped the speech would include reassurances, but instead it was merely one bromide after another”
  • What do you call someone who always puts blame on others?
    That person is 'an adept at scapegoating' scapegoat (ˈskeɪpˌɡəʊt ) Definitions noun a person made to bear the blame for others
  • Where should the comma be placed in the salutation of a letter?
    Bla bla bla Or in a more formal situation: Dear Mr Black, Bla bla bla It is uncommon to put a comma before the title even in an informal email salutation (though quite acceptable), but it would never be done in a formal letter email
  • (Parentheses (inside parentheses)) - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    The old typographical convention which I was told years ago by a retired typesetter, is that if one has nested parenthetical expressions, different characters are used for the inner parenthetical than the outer, so the outer expression is parenthesis, the next level of parenthesis is square brackets, and the next set after that is parentheses again, or sometimes curved brackets, so the pattern
  • Origin of the idiom If ifs and buts were candy and nuts?
    From The Phrase Finder: "If "ifs" and "buts" were candy and nuts, wouldn't it be a Merry Christmas?" seems to be attributed to Don Meredith (the American football player commentator)
  • In legal citations, why are see, see also, etc. , in italics?
    In your example where ‘… legal scholars have observed, bla-bla-bla (see name-of-article) the only difference should be in style, not any kind of meaning Almost certainly, there is no more difference between the citation of a legal decision and a peer-reviewed journal article, than between articles published in hard- or paperback





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