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02:17
> The Pentagon informed Russian military officials, through its established deconfliction channel, of the strike before the launching of the missiles, the official said, with American officials knowing when they did that that Russian authorities may well have alerted the Assad regime.
Word of the Day: deconfliction
> The word “deconflict” – or worse “deconfliction” – is being used by US officials to describe attempts to ensure that US and Russian air forces don’t shoot at each other while they conduct overlapping air campaigns over Syria.
An interesting word
 
3 hours later…
05:39
Hey all....
must we add a hyphen while separating two words like plot and explanation?
06:25
@SreeCharan It's best to consult your style guide. Personally, I think an en-dash would be a very good choice.
Thanks @DamkerngT.
You're welcome! :D
A hyphen would make it read like a word, while a dash wouldn't have the same effect.
06:43
0
Q: are my interpretations of the article correct?

jack bang Organizational consultants call it disruption. Trump sometimes hints that it is little more than good fun. He has called the Roosevelt Room, across the hall from his private office, a "boardroom," as though it were just another television set where he could go around the table to tell those wh...

 
2 hours later…
08:16
\o all
 
2 hours later…
10:00
Of my two daughters she is ———.
(A) elder (B) eldest (C) the elder (D) the eldest
C
@M.A.R. @DamkerngT. @snailplane
 
3 hours later…
12:40
Almost all supposedly incorrect answers are about as incorrect as "Of my two daughters", @user62015
Go figure. (^_^)
12:53
I just returned from a bicycle ride.
And this song is most relevant
13:29
I don't understand: What do they mean by "Final treatment"?
And what is SAF1?
13:54
@snailplane @Man_From_India I have to award my bounty within 24hrs for this question. Any chance of (even a short) answer from either of you? (I'm not happy enough with the answers currently there to award it to them ...)
12
Q: Is "have to" a modal verb?

AraucariaI have heard people say that "have to" is a modal verb. Other people have told me it is not. Why exactly is "have to" a modal verb? Or why exactly is it not? I have also heard that it is a preriphrastic modal verb. Is a periphrastic modal verb a modal verb?

Thanks @DamkerngT.
I, he and you / (B) are / (C) friends / (D) no error @DamkerngT. @M.A.R.
@user62015 No error
14:15
No error! Genteel deconfliction wins the day.
I just forgot what ''Genteel'' means
stackoverflow.com/posts/23503186/timeline -- @Snail 63 spam edit suggestions
14:30
> Scientists have now shown that if male rodents are fed a diet rich in folic acid, methionine and vitamin B12, their progeny do not perform well in memory tests. This suggests that the intake of high concentrations of such methyl donors could also have side effects in humans, for example, if they consume excessive amounts of energy drinks or folic acid pills.
> "For a long time, it was assumed that these paternal epigenetic marks are erased completely after the fusion of sperm and egg cell," explains Dr. Dan Ehninger, who leads a research group at the DZNE's Bonn site. However, we know today that part of the paternal DNA methylation survives this process.
DNA methylation is heritable
 
1 hour later…
15:53
> It turns out that the Yekaterinburg Opera and Ballet Theater performs Satyagraha, an opera about Mahatma Gandhi.
Is performs the correct verb here?
16:04
I've just got(ten) this reply from company:
> Thank you for contacting Datwyler Sealing Solutions.
We would reply as soon as possible.

Datwyler Sealing Solutions Team!
Is this would okay?
Shouldn't it be will?
 
1 hour later…
17:20
Yes, it should be will there.
If "Yekaterinburg Opera and Ballet Theater" is a single troupe, in AmE we would use performs as in your example. I think BrE would use perform.
18:04
@Davo Thank you!
18:35
> Carry out a risk analysis.
Do I need this "a"?
This is a cell in a table in a Word document.
Basically it says what needs to be done concerning a particular issue
 
1 hour later…
19:38
@DamkerngT. So, on the radio they said something about Thai people and red fanta... something about good house spirits?
What's "fanta?"
Soda?
Red soda = cream soda
No idea where that association comes from.
@M.A.R. It's a brand of soda, yes.
It comes in a variety of flavors/colors.
Strawberry o.O
19:46
But why do we call the red one cream soda?
@skullpetrol I don't know who "we" is... Americans certainly don't. Cream soda is different entirely.
We don't have strawberry stuff here, except toothpaste
And occasionally the fruit itself
Our soda flavors here are orange, coca, and that green bottle I don't know the flavor of
Those are the major flavors
People drink soda traditionally, so you need to be a known brand to sell
@M.A.R. Mountain Dew?
Or Lemon/lime soda like Sprite/7Up
19:52
Oh, 7Up
Lemon is also a bit popular, yeah
 
2 hours later…
22:01
@snailplane Word for a snailboat?
0
Q: Word for sailboat moving in a harbour

Clive LongIs there a verb for the motion of a sailboat in a marina or harbour when the yacht or dinghy is solely powered by an engine, not the sails? For example: "Peter's dinghy slowly xxxxed from its mooring in the harbour until it could set sail in the open sea".

Hmmm, maybe one for a sail-ly person ... Or a snaily-person ....
1
Q: A common word or group or description of all the following: Love, Lust, Crush, Infatuation

T2EI know the meaning of all these words like Love, Lust, Crush, Infatuation. I'm looking for a word which could mean any of these. For example, the word 'Animal' can be used to bucket/group dog, lion, cat. Dog, lion and cat are all basically animals. Similarly, is there a word to bucket these word...

22:30
5
Q: Difference between will and shall

rspWhat is the difference between will and shall in modern spoken English? For example I have the following sentences: He will arrive on Tuesday. He shall arrive on Tuesday. Are there any rules specifying usage of will and shall? Reopen note: I looked at this question here: "Shall"...

5
Q: Difference between will and shall

rspWhat is the difference between will and shall in modern spoken English? For example I have the following sentences: He will arrive on Tuesday. He shall arrive on Tuesday. Are there any rules specifying usage of will and shall? Reopen note: I looked at this question here: "Shall"...

@Araucaria Wasn't there just a question about this up yesterday?
Something about a teacher telling them not to use will with we.
23:07
@Catija Yes, it's a rule from 19th century English - 2 centuries too late! Definitely too late for people who want to learn English to communicate with. The question's a couple of days old. I just put a bounty on it.
@Araucaria That question is a better one, I think... I actually marked the one I was talking about as a dupe of a similar question from 2015. The one with the bounty is a good, broader question that will serve well as a canonical explanation if it gets a good answer.
@Catija Let's hope it does. I did the biggest bounty I could in the hope it would, but let's see ...

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