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felled    音标拼音: [f'ɛld]


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  • Fall, fell, felled - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    causative: fell, felled, has be felled, as opposed to intransitive: fall, fell, has fallen However, felling a dynasty or regime, or anything except a man, animal, or tree, is pretty rare today; OED 1 was already marking it as obsolete in 1895 Topple (in the transitive use) is more common EDIT -- taking a healthy bite of my words
  • word choice - Is it falling or felling? - English Language Usage . . .
    fell verb 1 Cut down (a tree) ‘33 million trees are felled each day’ 1 1 Knock down ‘Whitlock felled him with one punch’ - ODO fall verb 4 (no object, with adverbial) Be captured or defeated ‘their mountain strongholds fell to enemy attack’ - ODO Use felling if you're focusing on (or alluding to) the reason or agent for the fall
  • meaning - Difference between logs, timber, and lumber - English . . .
    Logs are the piece of a felled tree, usually the size of a large branch (could even be a large branch) up to a whole section of a trunk, and generally just a rough piece of wood that you could use either as-is (such as in building a log cabin), for use in small-to-medium projects, or to be used as firewood Not generally to be found in a
  • What is the difference between fell over and fell on in nuance?
    The different is not a nuance These are two different verbs to fall (intransitive) - This is the verb with the most general meaning It means that the subject descends u
  • grammaticality - Direct Object. Is there a rule? - English Language . . .
    "For several days" is an adverbial phrase describing the manner in which he said it Same thing here: "a great distance" is not what was "felled", it was how the thing fell By the way, "fell" can also be a transitive verb, though the usage is not common You can say, "He felled a tree", meaning that he cut a tree down and made it fall
  • grammaticality - Why can’t you say “I fell the stairs”? - English . . .
    As in "I felled a tree " "Fell" is also the past tense of "fall " But even in this context, you can't talk about "falling" the stairs You need a preposition, to fall down the stairs, or even to fall from the stairs
  • Were Fell and Fel both correct spellings?
    Both are attested Before Modern English, there were really no overarching prescriptivist entities, so the concept of "correct" spellings didn't exist
  • Correct English: Get sick or fall sick
    (For whatever reason ) In the US we say "got sick" and "fell ill" Although, "falling ill" implies that it's just the start of something that's going to turn out to be much more serious and long term - Like: "He got sick with the flu, last week," as opposed to "She fell ill with cancer, as soon as they returned from the trip "
  • meaning - Origin of the idiom falling off the wagon - English . . .
    From The Encyclopedia of Word and Phrase Origins, by Robert Hendrickson: The original version of this expression, 'on the water wagon' or 'water cart,' which isn't heard anymore, best explains the phrase
  • What is the origin of the phrase grease the skids?
    But the 1875, 1882, and 1884 examples all involve skids used for moving felled trees; moreover, all three are set in Washington state or in British Columbia, right across the border from Washington Subsequent nineteenth-century literal instances of "grease the skids" skew heavily toward lumber and timber contexts





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