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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 for someone who is ignorant and proud?
    An ignoranus is somebody who manages to be both ignorant and an asshole Alas it is not a real word, but just a play on ignoramus I first came across it in an email listing the winners of the "The Washington Post's Mensa invitational", a contest which invites readers to take "any word from the dictionary, alter it by adding, subtracting, or changing one letter, and supply a new definition
  • Colourful Language with regards to swearing
    Why is expletive laden, or coarse language often referred to as being colourful colorful? Oxford Dictionaries define it, colourful 2 2 (of language) vulgar or rude ‘colorful words usually
  • Where did snuck come from? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    "Digged" became "dug", "stringed" became "strung", and "dived" became "dove" In this same way, "sneaked" is becoming "snuck"; the word "snuck" is already generally accepted as "sneak"'s past participle in most of the English-speaking world except for Britain Eventually, it is thought, those tea-timers will give in to the pressures of the
  • 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
  • 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
  • “Has been” vs. “was” - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Should one use has been or was in the following sentence, and why? For many years the USA has been a British colony For many years the USA was a British colony
  • phrases - Idioms similar to dig your own grave - English Language . . .
    I'm looking for an idiom or phrase similar to "dig your own grave" It's for this scenario: Person 1 made a comment and is now attempting to explain it talk themselves out of an awkward situation
  • Evolution of irregular verbs over the last century
    I'm thinking particularly of "dug", where you find "digged" in older texts (However, the OED says that the past participle was always "dug", and what has happened is that this has ousted the original past It is unusual, though to find a word with a weak past and strong past participle, so I suspect that both forms were there from the outset)





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