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  • grammaticality - Use of it before sufficeth to say - English . . .
    “Sufficeth” is just an old spelling of “suffices” commonly used in the King James translation of the Bible and other Renaissance religious texts People often use it in a joking manner to give their writing a semi-Biblical air, especially in the phrase “it sufficeth to say ”
  • rhymes - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    The seething sea ceaseth and thus the seething sea sufficeth us The techniques used in tongue-twisters include sibilance , where s-sounds are repeated ─ present in she s ells s ea-shells Information on Wikipedia
  • Which is preferable: Suffice to say, or Suffice it to say?
    The Australian Concise Oxford Dictionary, ed 7 (1987) [which I find to be still a useful resource], says "suffice" is an intransitive verb, giving the example "suffice to do "
  • Need a word that combines the elements related to this and . . .
    I think that "Notably though" sufficeth in making your point, to the extent that: I consider it unlikely that any intended reader would miss your point I doubt that few, if any, would think its use inappropriate in the context or even feel that the term "stands" out as they read the text
  • What is the origin of the phrase “guts for garters”?
    It sufficeth not that thou hast subdued yonder Petitoes of Mars, and captived their Lady, fortune will not sell her at so under a rate, it remaineth that you vanquish me also before you injoy her, the wager of our contention, whose mercy i'le constraine you to abide, and in whose defence my sword (blushing at thy impieties) shall strike thy
  • etymology - Etymological origin and earliest recorded occurrence of . . .
    Now, the suffix "-er" is used in German to mean one who's from a place, but pilgrims sauntering to the Holy Land were clearly not from there, so that would be an odd thing for German villagers to say, never mind that no German-speaking villages were along any part of that journey, even the route from Northeastern France never crossing into Germany but going southeast through France into Italy





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