So a Gold Digger is an informal term for:
A woman who associates with or marries a man chiefly for material gain
What would the Gold Digger's man be called? A Mark? A Sugar Daddy?
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] URL in title, bad keyword in body, bad keyword in title, blacklisted website in body, blacklisted website in title, +2 more: growxlsite.com/zilotrope/ by Zacharytis on english.SE
I am looking for a very formal word instead of meeting.
This is a small meeting with less than 20 people to discuss the current regulations in the industry. It will be used for our huge conference this year as one of small sessions in the event.
Do you know any formal word for it?
I thought of me...
Is there a term for dismissing all of a person's arguments because one of them contains a fallacy (despite the rest not being dependent on that fallacious argument)?
It's not fallacy fallacy because it's not concluding the opposite because of a fallacious argument, it's just dismissing valid arg...
I'm looking for a noun to describe someone who's against something. For example:
He's one of those people who oppose the idea of...
I know you can simply say "He's against the idea of", but I was wondering if there was any noun that I could use in this particular scenario. I thought about simpl...
I want to double check, in addressing the Pope, in dialogue, in fiction, should one capitalize both the "your" and the "holiness" so it would read, "Yes, Your Holiness." Can someone help? Thank you!
@tchrist Yes, it's definitely a pain. But not as much as the insistence by some people that case-insensitive names are an improvement over case-sensitive ones. I worked for several years for a (MS-based) company where that was the prevailing view. Confusion was the standard there.
I am looking for a word that represents someone who has been accounted for during a roll call or similar process if one exists. It may be considered to be the opposite of an absentee.