3. An abusive or contemptuous word or phrase. 2006, Eric L. Goldstein, The Price of Whiteness: Jews, Race, and American Identity: Part of this process was the elaboration of new terms for the Jew, especially the increasingly popular epithet “kike”.
@MattЭллен Yeah, I can't listen to the audio at work either.
> The conversation on Reddit hones in on the way the poem is pronounced, rather than its political meaning. "It sounds like a medley of Scottish, Dutch, German and English to me," wrote one. "To me it sounds like the Spanish Ambassador from Blackadder," said another.
What is the rule and meaning of does in the following sentence (I think the appear omitted by it but if I am wrong please correct the title and tag):
The Moon illusion is an optical illusion which causes the Moon to appear larger near the
horizon than it does higher up in the sky. (en.wiki...
Even though I didn't see a single episode of the Great British Bake Off, I have a middling to strong desire to learn to make cakes. And apple pie. I think some kind of subliminal messaging has been going on.
Man, what's up with ML? She's been getting progrssively more aggressive:
And I would really love to know who is the idiot who downvoted this question. It shows research, it's useful, it's clear and it's about the English language. Honestly sometimes I do wonder... — Mari-Lou A6 hours ago
When a title, made of two hyphenated words, is followed by a proper noun, is the word after the hyphen capitalised?
Eg. I understand that the following statement is correct:
He killed King Ravan.
But, which of these is correct?
He killed Demon-king Ravan.
He killed Demon-King Rava...
Are his title and name King Ravan and is he a demon, then: "demon King Ravan."
Is Ravan een demon-king, then "demon-king Ravan".
Is demon-king a title, the "Demon-king Ravan."
Background: I am editing/proofreading a series of stories before they get published. Before I make a decision about this matter, I need to finalise after taking expert advice.
For example: John was the village Sage (suggesting that the village's society had a specific position called sage) but John was a sage (suggesting that John was wise).
But is john a great hing as in a high king or is he just great at his job, so a great king?
If the former, I'd capitalize both: the Great King. If the latter, only king: the great King.
For example, if John has gone down in history as the Mad King, capitalize both. If he's just a king and mad, write the mad King.
Though both @Cerberus and @AndrewLeach are more qualified to judge this than I. Not only do I trust their editing skills more than my own, they're both subjects so should know about all this royal stuff.
@AndrewLeach Huh, must be some legal difference then I guess. I remember a little idiot in university who objected to "citizenship class" on the grounds of being a subject.
@terdon @AndrewLeach @Cerberus If you guys had to write a fantasy/myth based story, and there was a demon who was a king of demon land containing demons, what title would you create? Just King? or Demon-king? or... ??
@LWTBP Just king. I'd call him the Demon King if he were the only demon around. If they're all demons, it's like calling a king the Human King which makes no sense.
There is a proposal that may be beneficial for all SE languages sites. Its about hosting audio files to help others learning proper/correct pronounciation
The following feature request would be useful for the language sites in general if implemented.
A discussion took place in a chatroom dedicated for the Arabic Language Proposal it started:
let say a non-Arabic speaker asking how to pronounce a word in
Arabic
the discussion went on from...
@Omar I understand, I'm just thinking that in English at least, there are so many "correct" pronunciations that it would be almost impossible to do. And then there's also the way that @MattЭллен pronounces it which is just wrong.
@terdon Just curious about Wikipedia. They seem to follow a lot of their styleguide well. But why is "Witch-king" capitalised even when it's used without the full name? We wouldn't capitalise "king" when used without thename.
@MattЭллен Don't succumb to the patriarchy! When you realize an advertisement has subconsciously convinced you to buy their product, buy the other brand.