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Quietest查看 Quietest 在百度字典中的解释百度英翻中〔查看〕
Quietest查看 Quietest 在Google字典中的解释Google英翻中〔查看〕
Quietest查看 Quietest 在Yahoo字典中的解释Yahoo英翻中〔查看〕





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  • Which is correct - most quiet or quietest? [duplicate]
    0 Since quiet is a two-syllable adjetive, the rule-of-thumb would make more quiet and most quiet the expected comparative forms; however, quietest and quieter are six-times more common (or, as many would say, "commoner " Both forms are correct, but the single-word construction is what the American ear expects to hear
  • Where does the slang word bad + ass (badass) come from?
    What is the origin of the word badass? Why a "bad" ass "bad" + "ass"? What is an ass that is bad and how can an ass that is bad describe a tough person?
  • Origin of on the QT? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Apparently Q T is derived from quiet and originated in the 19th century, although its provenance is not certain From phrases org uk: The slang term 'qt' is a shortened form of 'quiet' There's no definitive source for the phrase 'on the q t ', although it appears to be of 19th century British origin - not, as is often supposed, American The longer phrase 'on the quiet' is also not
  • When quoting a quotation, how do you handle the double quotes?
    Assume there is original source text: This restaurant is amazing with "delicious lasagna" and great service Make sure you go 6-7pm for the quietest times I want to quote "delicious lasagna" b
  • noun ok? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    The quietest-singing bird Highest-grossing film isn't an idiom, but simply a superlative compounded with a present participle being used as an adjective, and is therefore hyphenated
  • meaning - Is it chalk it up to or chock it up to? - English . . .
    Robert Rubin, Going to Hell in a Hen Basket: An Illustrated Dictionary of Modern Malapropisms (2015) has this discussion of "chalk-full" and "chock it up to": chalk-full V: chock it up to Confuses chockfull with chalk it up to Chock-full is an old phrase, perhaps coming from choke-full or full to choking Chalk it up to comes from chalk tally marks on a slate Chock marks indicate where to
  • Evenest vs most even word usage and its history
    The general situation is addressed at Which is correct - “most quiet” or “quietest”? But I'd say 'quietest' sounds nicer than 'evenest'
  • Why is fickler a word? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    simple simpler simplest clever cleverer cleverest quiet quieter quietest With many two-syllable adjectives (e g polite, common), -er -est and more most are both possible With others (including adjectives ending in -ing, -ed, -ful and -less), only more most is possible In general, the structure with more most is becoming more common
  • Can someone explain the phrase All is fair in love and war?
    The concept behind the phrase is that some areas of life are so important and overwhelming that you cannot blame someone for acting in their own best interest For war, this implies that spies, torture, lying, backstabbing, making deals with enemies, selling out allies, bombing civilians, wounding instead of killing, and so on are "fair game" in the sense that by taking these options off of
  • What about you? versus How about you? - English Language Usage . . .
    From my point of view, if the difference between what about and how about in general is slight, the difference between what about you and how about you is even slighter They are certainly interchangeable, as you mentioned, but I would go so far as to say that their common usages are semantically indistinguishable In point of usage, Ngrams shows a slight preference for What about you: COCA





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