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duddy查看 duddy 在百度字典中的解释百度英翻中〔查看〕
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  • etymology - What is the origin of fuddy-duddy? - English Language . . .
    It is certainly possible that duddy fuddiel meaning a ragged fellow migrated from Cumberland to the United States in the early 1800s and evolved into fuddyduddy meaning an old codger But I have been unable to find any instances of duddy fuddiel (or of duddy or fuddiel in the relevant sense) in U S sources A further complication is the
  • Is there any word for a person who is not updated on new things . . .
    Stack Exchange Network Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q A communities including Stack Overflow, the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers
  • Is there a word which means one who prefers older ways?
    Perhaps fuddy-duddy would work? It's what I thought of immediately on reading your question Fuddy-Duddy NOUN informal A person who is old-fashioned and fussy ‘he probably thinks I'm an old fuddy-duddy’
  • Is there a word for words formed of repeating sounds?
    The distinctive linguistic feature in words like papa, dada, mama or bubba is called reduplication, or to be precise, exact reduplication, where a single CV syllable is repeated
  • What is the abbreviation for who are
    Hello, Jessica I know we're all still learning English (and if we're silly enough to think we're almost there, it goes and changes), but our sister site, ELL, is perhaps more suitable for those who're as far from the fuddy-duddy stage as you are
  • Can I use the adjective facile in the form of facile with
    @PeterShor: Yes, that was exactly what bothered me! The clash of register I was going to say it's the linguistic equivalent of (technological) "cyberpunk", but it's just dawned on me that (to me at least), "cyberpunk artwork" always implies some kind of hybrid between modern IT and Victorian technology (fusion-powered airships, steam-powered space rockets, or whatever)
  • etymology - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    However, this tendency seems reasonably strong in the non-h second-order reduplications (abba-dabba, boogie-woogie, chiller-diller, ducky-wucky, even-Steven, fuddy-duddy, etc ), too, so it may reflect a broader metrical preference
  • orthography - Is phone wrong? - Is phone wrong? - English Language . . .
    Such clipped forms are not regarded as contractions, and they should not be written with apostrophes Writing things like hippo', bra', 'cello and 'phone will, not to mince words, make you look like an affected old fuddy duddy who doesn't quite approve of anything that's happened since 1912 University of Sussex
  • Whats the English equivalent to svära i kyrkan in Swedish?
    quot;Svära i kyrkan quot; literally means to swear in church, and to my understanding the figurative meaning is when someone says or does something that questions defies a social norm in a softer
  • Orange is the new black! - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    When I was little, it was all fuddy-duddy Percy Thrower Now it's very social and very, very fashionable" — Ex-supermodel Ali Ward, who has switched careers to become a model gardener' — The Independent (13 June 1998) Meanwhile, Paul McFedries, The Complete Idiot's Guide to Weird Word Origins (2008) offers this take on "X is the new Y":





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