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  • grammar - Use of and lo in a sentence - English Language Usage . . .
    What, if any, is the right way to use "and lo" in a sentence? My basic structure is " [discussion about thing], and lo, [example of thing]", kind of like: There's a cliche about circus clowns being creepy and dangerous, and lo, last night I saw a clown violating a teddy bear
  • How to build Long distance Rhombic Tv Antennas - TV Fool
    How to build Long distance Rhombic Tv Antennas Enthusiast's Exchange
  • meaning - use of the interjection but lo . . . - English Language . . .
    According to the OED, in Middle English there are two distinct words "lo" or "loo" which have fallen together; one of them is indeed derived from a form of "look", but the other "lá, an exclamation indicating surprise, grief, or joy"
  • Low VHF antenna designs - TV Fool
    For information on some common antennas, check out our Antenna Quick Reference More antennas are still being added, so check back for updates
  • What is a more modern variant of the interjection Lo!
    What is a more modern variant of the interjection 'Lo! quot; I'm looking for a single word which has the same effect but is less archaic It is a very formal context I want to use it in that you ma
  • interjections - How to use the expression lo and behold - English . . .
    9 Lo comes from Middle English, where it was a short form of lok, imperative of loken, "to look" (see Etymonline, Wiktionary) To behold means "to see, to look at" and comes from Old English bihaldan, "give regard to, hold in view" (compare to behalten in contemporary German)
  • Etymology of the term low key - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    I tried Google Ngram viewer and see a lot of instances of the phrase "low key" even before the era of photography However, these instances seem to be using the term literally (ex "but all the conversation is carried on in a low key by the ladies" from A tour in quest of genealogy - a book published in 1811) and not in the idiomatic sense Since the idiomatic sense has the same shade (hah) of
  • What does no love lost mean and where does it come from?
    Searching Google books, I find that what the phrase originally meant in the 17th and 18th centuries was that "A loves B just as much as B loves A "; the amount of love is balanced, so there is no love lost In other words, unrequited love was considered to be "lost" This could be used to say they both love each other equally, or they both hate each other equally The idiom has now come to
  • rhymes - Is there an English translation of Dantes Divine Comedy . . .
    Israèl con lo padre e co’ suoi nati e con Rachele, per cui tanto fé, e altri molti, e feceli beati Noè, re, and fé are all stressed on the final syllable Palma translates this passage as: He took the shade of our first progenitor and Abel his son, Noah, God-honoring Moses, who was the giver of the law, patriarch Abraham, David the king,
  • verbs - log in to or log into or login to - English Language . . .
    When writing an instruction about connecting to a computer using ssh, telnet, etc , I'm not sure what spacing to use in this familiar spoken phrase: "Log in to host com" "Log into host com" "Login to





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