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  • A second past-form: dig digged digged - slang
    She digged me and I hadn't even noticed it! OR She dug me and I hadn't even noticed it! Which form will be used? The former? The later? Both? While the second one is Standard English, and I'm sure it's perfectly acceptable, would the first one be acceptable in speech? Or would it strike a native speaker as quite odd?
  • Where exactly did the slang phrase digging it come from
    I'm a young native english speaker raised in Canada At school me and most of my friends tend to use the phrase "Im really digging this", as to mean i'm really enjoying a specific thing or activity
  • word choice - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    I am writing an academic manuscript to describe the action of "digging certain stuff out " For instance, given an image containing several pedestrians, my image analysis techniques can extract those
  • phrase requests - Idiom for being forced to dig your own grave . . .
    I think it doesn't matter if they're "forced" ie at gunpoint to do something, or "coerced" as in giving a lot of incentive to do what will end their success career life Then there's literally digging your own grave, ie at literal gun point, for a more "dramatic" scenario (I imagine Westerns would have been FILLED with these scenarios as the bandits or the like did their business) Fallout New
  • Is the word boy racist in the following situation?
    While it has been common in America for racists to call black men "boy", it did not extend to other non-white races, so a white man would be unlikely to consider an Asian man a boy In addition, I don't think they usually used the epithet in contexts other than directly addressing a black man If there were separate restrooms, water fountains, bus seats, etc for whites and blacks, they wouldn
  • A word meaning to dig land with your nails or fingers
    What do you call "to dig land" with fingers? If I say “He desperately dug the soil” it sounds like the person is using a tool such as a shovel or a spade Which verb means digging with only your fi
  • Last Name and surname - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Between last name and surname, which one is British and which one is American? If I talk with somebody from Great Britain, which one is preferable?
  • Questions tagged [irregular-verbs] - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    A second past-form: "dig" "digged" "digged" I've been digging through the Internet and I can't find any legit answers to this question, even in English dictionaries Probably because this particular usage is rarely used in the past tense She'
  • pejorative language - What is a word for someone who intentionally . . .
    +1 for deaf As someone who finds it difficult to hear when there is a lot of background noise, I expect I have been misunderstood as aloof or snobbish or simply rude in the past In reality, I just haven't heard what's been said (or I've misunderstood what's been said), so I've either responded with an apparently tangential or unconnected reply, or failed to respond
  • Changes in English names of people
    Why is Robert called Bob and John called Jack sometimes? What is the history of or reason for this practice in changing the English names of people?





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