Hello, I'm unsure about a stylistic issue, and whether it's actually an issue. "word," or "word"? (Punctuation in quotation marks, or outside?) (Same goes for parentheses, punctuation inside or outside)?
Anonymous
@Ϻ.Λ.Ʀ. I don't know how suitable their question really is for EL&U in its current state.
The idiom put hair(s) on someone's chest means:
Fig. to do or take something to invigorate or energize someone, always
a male, except in jest: Here, have a drink of this stuff! It'll put hair on your chest. That stuff is powerful. It will really put hair on your chest.
[McGraw-Hill Dicti...
another well trafficked question that makes ELU little better than Urban Dictionary. The answers are people just giving their inarticulate half-assed opinion of their own juvenile experience. Why can't people answer authoritatively (and hopefully actually have some authority to do so). It makes me realize the quality of Encyclopedia Britannica/MW/OED vs wikipedia/wiktionary. People will put anything they feel like in there.
Will the gender neutrality movement send assassins if I say "No because women generally do not grow hair on their chests, nor do most of them want to." ?
Also @Mitch making thoroughly well cited answers is quite difficult and often somebody who just posts their unreferenced opinion will beat you to the punch. I don't particularly like posting the same suggestion as somebody else so I've had to drop a few ardously researched answers...