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03:29
@M.A.R.ಠ_ಠ Awo, literal translation: You stare at the moon, me at you!
 
3 hours later…
06:17
Which other words can be used other than "as to" in the given sentence...
M: Other than attraction, are there any technical queries from the customer, as to how long would it last or any queries like that.
 
2 hours later…
07:51
0
Q: In what degree/to what degree

Piyush YadavI was doing a chapter in my grammar and there I found the following sentences This mango is very sweet In this sentence, very shows in what degree the mango is sweet. What my confusion is We use to what degree but here in what degree is used and it sounds very weird.

 
2 hours later…
10:16
@RajatAudichya concerning
about
with regard to
 
10 hours later…
20:17
en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/deep_throat – apparently it's just an ordinary word. Never thought I'd hear it in a math lecture either.
20:31
ell.stackexchange.com/posts/213593/revisions I did it, guys (passed level 3).
@Man_From_India You should probably cite the source (unless it's a deep throat? lol) of your statistics in your answer to the featured question.
20:47
Also, your answer suffers the same issue the one by user Jan does: numbers by themselves don't expand on context (and wrong numbers even less so). Corpus queries can be difficult like that, so you'd better vet the results yourself.
But really, 4% in some minor corpus might well be a couple of outlying, statistically annoying, and/or reprehensible(!) instances.
Pronouncing a judgement such as "it's not wrong" based on that might not be as... judicious.
@userr2684291 it is from Global corpus and the text in the corpus occurred in 2012 - 2013. The statistics is to reflect the rarity of the phrase.
21:05
@Man_From_India You should put that in your answer. Maybe supply a link or some such as well. Right now it looks like you pulled those numbers out of your ...bass guitar. :-)
(I know it doesn't even rhyme, but it does to me.)
Just for you, I checked the US ones, and most of them were written in the 18th century or earlier, and the one that isn't is a false positive: "I'm really less interested in what degree they have". There's another one I couldn't exactly find the source of (when I click on the link provided, Ctrl+F doesn't find anything), so it's as if it doesn't exist.
Y'know what, I downvoted your answer until you vet it all and fix it all, haha. I don't agree with the conclusion. I'm sorry.
Hm, coordination of unlikes or just plain old carelessness: most of them were written in the 18th century or earlier, and the one that isn't – search me.
Also, the past simple with until? Probs should've used the perfect. (I can probably go on forever with all this self-awareness.)
22:10
@userr2684291 I've heard that one before somewhere
@userr2684291 Uh oh who invoked the statistician.
@userr2684291 Or you can opt to post something when you have some English to spare.
Unlike me. 2:42 a.m. What am I doing.
 
1 hour later…
23:23
@M.A.R.ಠ_ಠ Haha, good one.
I'm not very confident in answering "serious" questions.
@userr2684291 The ones that frown when asking?
Word of the day: Pooh-pooh
2
Huh. Never heard of that.
So wait a second. Why is his name Vinnie The Pooh?
Wouldn't know.
That cartoon was never popular here.
It's Winnie, though.
@userr2684291 Well, we got the pencil case designs
Nobody really watched it here either. Maybe a few years before my time as a kid.
23:37
@M.A.R.ಠ_ಠ Right.
@userr2684291 Oh, he wasn't fast or furious? That's disappointing.
What would other bears make of that.
The grisly grizzlies in The Edge, The Revenant, etc.
Interestingly, no movie is titled The Bear.
Yeah, never watched those either – if those are movie titles, that is.
Maybe. Lemme check. Oh wait!
I've seen this one. Pretty good movie!
@userr2684291 Your loss
Big bears threatening lives behind a glass screen is awesome.
Hm...
They look fearless, and they're big enough to justify it.
@M.A.R.ಠ_ಠ Bear that in mind.
Oh you recharged your English

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