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user402022
04:24
Hi, if a male politician is described as a "bobblehead", do you agree with Urban that it means something like "An abnormally obnoxious know-it-all, but brainless, individual who always has an answer, or factoid about everything, or "has done that too" but better than you. However, everyone knows better." Could it mean a puppet controlled by s.o. else, for instance lobbies, i.e. because of the doll meaning?
 
2 hours later…
Anonymous
06:28
@suiiurisesse I would be surprised if someone used it with the 'puppet' meaning you describe.
why use Urban when regular dictionaries define it @suiiurisesse?
A bobblehead, also known as a nodder, wobbler or bobble head, is a type of collectible doll. Its head is often oversized compared to its body. Instead of a solid connection, its head is connected to the body by a spring or hook in such a way that a light tap will cause the head to bobble, hence the name. == History == During the seventeenth century, figurines of Buddha and other religious figures called "temple nodders" were produced in Asia. The earliest known Western reference to a bobblehead is thought to be in Nikolai Gogol's 1842 short story "The Overcoat", in which the main character's neck...
unless, of course, you are searching for what you want to believe :-)
 
1 hour later…
08:08
4 messages moved to ­Trash
Oh it worked. Last time it didn't. Whatever
08:44
@skullpatrol Strangely enough, none of them expounds on the figurative meaning.
@suiiurisesse I think this would make a good question on ELL. S.o. else isn't a thing, so please don't use it – just spell the word out. S.O. normally stands for "significant other", or perhaps here it could mean "StackOverflow".
Hah, "figurative". Damn I'm good without even realizing it.
Significant other else. Makes sense to me.
Word of the day: knockout
2
LDOCE gives this example: Her dress was a knockout.
Hehe.
09:05
classic boxing word
there's also the so called "technical knockout"
and "walkover"
> the act of winning one stage of a competition without having to compete in it because the person that you should be playing against is no longer taking part
@skullpatrol Yeah, but I actually meant it with the meaning suggested by that sentence. I'm sure I've heard it before in that sense, and we have the same word in our language, but I've only noticed it now in English. (:
 
3 hours later…
12:45
1
Q: *Increased* Verb or adjective

user4084Can we use the word increased as an adjective? I have found that in many sentences word increased is used as both "has increased" and "is increased", as in these: Water level is increased by 1%. Water level has increased by 1%.

 
2 hours later…
15:11
Is it weird that I prefer to do my research work in a corner of library instead of my personal office? For some reason, I feel very calm and happy in libraries.
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4 hours later…
19:41
0
Q: locked question does have an answer

Edward BarnardI'm not sure of the proper solution, and I've briefly searched meta... The question As an intermediate English student, I need ur guidance is on hold and locked, but it does have an answer as asked: https://tracktest.eu/english-levels-cefr/ - this is the CEFR, Common European Framework of Referen...

20:18
1 message moved to ­Trash
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Bad keyword in answer, bad keyword in link text in answer, potentially bad keyword in answer (168): On or at graduation day? by johan smith on ell.SE
 
2 hours later…
22:34
@Cardinal I don’t find that strange at all. There’s something very appealing about the smell of books to me, and libraries almost always are comfortable.

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