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  1. Coney and rabbit: what’s the difference? - English Language & Usage ...

    Sep 9, 2012 · So coney is a sort of older, local, or rustic name for any leporid or even lagomorph, one perhaps still favored by Bilbo’s furriers. Another place you might come across coney is in the dialect …

  2. What do you call the male equivalent to Cougar (woman)?

    Jul 3, 2024 · What is the male equivalent to the term "cougar"? Clarifying ... The term "cougar" describes an older woman seeking younger men. So a male equivalent would …

  3. meaning - Why are "con artists" called artists? - English Language ...

    Dec 23, 2020 · In Greene's work, 'coney-catching' (spelled variously; "swindling, cheating; trickery, deception", OED) is described as an art; he considers, although he does not specifically call, the …

  4. How do you describe something that has "just enough" details?

    Something that's is brief enough to get the message across, without being overly "word-ey", or verbose, could be described as "succinct", or "concise". i.e, "Explain as best you can, in a [succinct/concise] …

  5. meaning - "Unavailable" vs. "not available" - English Language

    Aug 26, 2014 · What is the difference between unavailable and not available? In my opinion, unavailable is something that will never be available, while not available is something that is not available right …

  6. grammar - require or requires? (verb agreement) - English Language ...

    May 31, 2019 · The subject of this sentence is "Achieving goals", and it is singular. The examples you mention do not make your subject plural. Therefore, it would be "requires". This is subject-verb …

  7. Origin of the phrase "Now we're cooking with

    "Coney Island" became a word in the University of Chicago's new dictionary, but terms like "now you're cooking with gas" and "that ain't the way I heard it", used by the people who frequent Coney Island …

  8. Where does "Don't bogart that joint" come from? [closed]

    I've looked on Google for several minutes, but I can't find a plausible reason, nor any immediately useful things to follow up. (I understand "Don't bogart that joint" to mean "Pass the [cannabis]...

  9. If 'pre' is previous, 'post' is after, what is current?

    Jun 21, 2012 · We were discussing something like pre-boss era, post-boss era. What word describes the era where the boss is still there?

  10. Where did the phrase "washing one's hands of" originate?

    Jun 15, 2014 · You've expressed the point that we can frame "wash one's hands of" using the general formula "Subject, Object, Prepositional Phrase, Of". But my question was about where this structure …