If once we allow people to start spiritualising and refining the sense of the word Christian, it … will become in their mouths simply a term of praise. But that way of using the word will be no enrichment of the language, for we already have the word good. … It is much clearer to say he is a bad Christian than to say he is not a Christian. —C. S. Lewis
I was searching to see if it's common today to (incorrectly) capitalize the beginning of the sentence after the greeting (Dear Dolly,) and am surprise to discover the people answering are lost themselves.
First, there is not a comma after “Hi/hello” but before the name, unless you use a title and...
Actually, the only thing I'm leaving on the table here is that I should very much like to get a gold badge for single-word-request. I'm about 27 answers shy of that. Already have the points.
You know, a funny thought just occurred to me. If someone—not me, of course—were to go back and edit 15 questions I've answered that could legitimately have the single-word-request and add that, I wonder if that would catch me up.
I want to name a person who makes loud noises to attract people on purpose (without considering the sex of audiences) in my writing, a name not an adjective like noisy but negative as well, not too rude or offensive, only ironic but acceptable. Can I name him "Mr Noise" for example? Does not it s...
Man, I don't know how there are so many "what should I call this" questions. Ok, I know how, but why? Can no one make a stylistic decision for themselves?
(@Cerb, I'm looking at you, 'cause I know you'll be rolling 'round in your hell-sleep over why I don't use "for himself" instead. But it's fine, see? Individual style an' all. Also, you can't catch me up here on this rainbow.)
Let the record show that the last time I checked I was neither female nor a robot. But if I were a secret programming project of Jeff Atwood's, I could easily be mistaken about those things. — Robusto20 secs ago
Updated on October 7th 2012
Chrome:
Press either CTRL + SHIFT + J to open the "Console" tab of the Developer Tools.
Alternative method:
Press either CTRL + SHIFT + I or F12 to open the Developer Tools.
Press ESC (or click on "Show console" in the bottom right corner) to slide the con...
Well, give it a try. At least we will know if the script serves your purpose. Then the details of finding if you have Dragonfly or not can be managed.
@tchrist Wait ... it won't work for you in Chrome because those are Opera-specific shortcut keys you're using. Duh. I think you'll have to figure out the Dragonfly thing.
@JacobBlack The ad itself is creepy because of its weird all-caps and title caps typography, excessive photoshopping of the model, and the fact that the model behind the text is staring straight at the camera wearing what appears to be a wedding dress (visual read:" I am designed for the male gaze! this property could be yours!" conflicts a great deal with the feminist message in the beginning of Confessions, which is probably what I watched first).
I do somewhat recognize the irony in my whinging about this whilst procrastinating on finishing the artwork for my Catholic friends' wedding save-the-date.
Hi all. I asked a question in ELL to which several answers have been posted. But Nobody in their answers bothered to clarify if 2nd form of the question is correct or not. Please have a look. I found no one currently in chat of ELL.So asking for help here.
Suppose a sentence is:
You have no idea what the thing is.
So if we convert it to question, what should be the correct form? 1 or 2?
1) Have you any idea what the thing is?
2) Have you any idea what is the thing?
I dimly remember the second concept is grammatically correct.