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  • etymology - Where does the word “snogging” come from? - English . . .
    The OED defines snog as follows: snog, v (snogs, snogging, snogged): kiss and cuddle amorously the pair were snogging on the sofa; [with object]: he snogged my girl at a party snog, n: a long kiss or a period of amorous kissing and cuddling: he gave her a proper snog, not just a peck Origin: 1940s: of unknown origin Which isn't terribly helpful and is already given in the question The word
  • Etymology and meaning of the word snog
    Having looked to urban dictionary, witionary, online etymology, dictionary com, Wikipedia and wordfreaks tribe net, I have found a wide variance in the etymology and definition of the word snog I
  • Origin of canoodle - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Related: Etymology and meaning of the word “snog” This would be a good link to add to the question
  • User Abraham Zhang - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Q A for linguists, etymologists, and serious English language enthusiasts
  • A word or phrase for a brief, unplanned romantic interaction
    2 I'm writing a scene in which two characters have a bit of a heated snog in a broom cupboard Neither is intending to take it any further What word or phrase would best fit this type of situation? I considered 'quickie' and checked its synonyms, but that noun is usually associated with sex and there's none of that in this particular interaction
  • Is there a common abbreviation for with or without? e. g. w wo or w w o
    Is there a common abbreviation for quot;with or without quot;? e g w wo or w w o Obviously, something this complex is best written in full form, but I'm looking for something to use in space
  • What is the difference betwwen the 80s and the 80s?
    Strictly speaking, "the 80's" is wrong Apostrophes are used to denote possession or contraction (as JonHanna points out in the comments, apostrophes have other uses, but these are the only two that we need consider as possibly being relevant here) The contraction here is from "1980s", so the correct form of the contracted version is '80s 80s, without the apostrophe, can be seen as a less
  • On top of my head? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Right It's off, not on, and the idea is that the idea was just lying in a stack at the top of one's mind This is not suitable for detailed planning, but it's OK for estimates and immediate action On the tip of my tongue, on the other hand, is more for remembering words and phrases than other kinds of facts Same metaphor idea, except tongue for speech and head for ideas
  • Etymology of black - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    The following source traces the history of the term black The Old English blac was used, like blanc, to refer to a fair person, someone “devoid of colour” It was only in the 16th century that we saw the semantic change of blac to refer to something dark (night-colour): The word ‘Black’ can be traced back to its proto Indo-European origins through the word ‘blac’ which meant pale
  • Using a capital letter for every word of a title
    In Wikipedia's entry for letter case, under a section involving sentence case, it mentions the variants initial caps and start case: Title case (capital case, headline style) "The Quick Brown Fox Jumps over the Lazy Dog" A mixed-case style with all words capitalised, except for certain subsets (particularly articles and short prepositions and conjunctions) defined by rules that are not





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