English language questions

Discussion in 'Lounge' started by mild pump milk, Sep 12, 2017.

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  1. metaller

    metaller Audiosexual

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  2. fraifikmushi

    fraifikmushi Guest

    Or, if you're the crab master, they will also scuttle for you.
    Sure! leo.org
    Things come for you in your sleep. Wether they crawl to, scuttle towards, sneak up on or weasel is irrelevant imho. You're asleep after all and you don't care how the monster gets you in the end.

    :wink:
     
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  3. scrappy

    scrappy Platinum Record

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    Since this thread is about usage n' whatnot, I should make a correction.
    Whoops, that should have been "your first try..." not "you're first try".
    Imagine, having to quote myself just to show I'm a todger..
     
  4. Lambchop

    Lambchop Banned

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    ... vs. "right on the money" vs. "spot on" vs. "on the money"
    In my interwebs
    &
    In print


    :shalom: I'll show myself out...
     
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  5. MMJ2017

    MMJ2017 Audiosexual

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    "spot on" vs."dead on, balls accurate"
     
  6. Sylenth.Will.Fall

    Sylenth.Will.Fall Audiosexual

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    Sorry buddy, I am always getting sidetracked.

    It means to make an assumption, or to get ahead of yourself by presuming what someone will do. For example. Two people just met, he says to her I ordered us a cab to be there at 8, so be ready, and she might say to him, "whoa you're being a bit previous, ain't ya?" because he is presuming she's going out with him again!

    (It's a cockney thing rather than pure English, but it's still used occasionally, innit) <<notice the innit, That's my favourite one
     
    Last edited: Sep 16, 2017
  7. Sylenth.Will.Fall

    Sylenth.Will.Fall Audiosexual

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    People just get that all upside down :P
     
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  8. Sylenth.Will.Fall

    Sylenth.Will.Fall Audiosexual

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    I know ya got crawly right early on in your post, and you probably know this too, but for others, Crawley is the place near Gatwick Airport
     
  9. Crash Davis

    Crash Davis Ultrasonic

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    It came AT me. (COME AT is a phrasal verb meaning to move towards somebody as though you are going to attack them.)

    It ain't no use to sit and wonder why, Babe.

    English English and American English. Degree in writing. Studied English all my life.

    BUT: Credentials don't mean squat. (See Dylan quote, above.)

    If the insect is a demon, then perhaps it came FOR you.

    Give a reader freedom to imagine how it moved. The nightmares of a reader will surpass the words you write.
     
    Last edited: Sep 16, 2017
  10. Seedz

    Seedz Rock Star

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  11. Crash Davis

    Crash Davis Ultrasonic

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  12. Diogenes

    Diogenes Guest

    That's right. Crabs walk (sideways)..
     
  13. scrappy

    scrappy Platinum Record

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    What can I say, I guess I'm just a juan in a Cotillion.
    :winker:
     
  14. Lambchop

    Lambchop Banned

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    *IN me. ALL OVER me. It comes in colors everywhere, it has no hair, it's a Cardisoma armatum.
    nvrmnd, disregard, just daydreaming...
     
    Last edited: Sep 16, 2017
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  15. Crash Davis

    Crash Davis Ultrasonic

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    Factoid: Cardisoma armatum is a crab:

    This name derives from their aggressive nature as adults and when being shipped to pet stores, they are often packed in soap dishes to prevent them from killing each other -- which, of course, does not apply to anybody here.

    Good one, Lambchop. Bravo.
     
  16. Lambchop

    Lambchop Banned

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  17. Dread_J

    Dread_J Kapellmeister

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    "" American English speakers are secondary, but still are very welcome.
    Other Europeans with English as native, secondary language, Australian are at the third place, but still are welcome. ""

    aaahhhh .... the smell of segregation in the morning.
     
  18. Helter Skelter

    Helter Skelter Producer

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    A man in a restaurant asked the waiter,
    "Do you serve crabs here?"
    "Certainly," replied the waiter,"We serve everyone!"
     
  19. mild pump milk

    mild pump milk Russian Milk Drunkard

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    Guys, crabs were as example. There will Spiders in title. You may forget about crabs and their walk sideways.
    )
     
  20. mild pump milk

    mild pump milk Russian Milk Drunkard

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    Have another one question!

    Cut out a fat - is it an idiom for "to eliminate accidents/chances"? Just found in two dictionaries of English-Russian, one of them is from programming slang. But it is rare to find this phrase in use and no other idiom dictionaries. So am I right? Is it real true meaning?
     
    Last edited: Dec 19, 2017
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