
Why not: I don't know why, but it seems to me Bob would sound a bit strange if he said, quot;Why is it that you have to get going?quot; Eliminating 'that' before 'Bob' would seem to be more in context
.According to the Online Etymology Dictionary, it comes from quot;fagquot;, meaning a loose piece of cloth:. fag (n.1) Look up fag at Dictionary British slang for quot;cigarettequot;
.Why would a piece of music be written with first and second endings that are the same? If President Trump's claimed authority to impose tariffs is taken away, who gets the 50
That's a very good question. It certainly is offensive here in the US, and I'm not sure why it's considered so much worse than other quot;Anglo-Saxonquot; words. I've used all of the other ones on
.Why would you do that? is less about tenses and more about expressing a somewhat negative surprise or amazement, sometimes enhanced by adding ever: Why would
.Why no, no more then reason. The OED doesn't explain why it is used in that manner. I can only speculate. First it was just a question expressing doubt reduced to its
.Why change register half way through? [ Of course, even in the middle ages, educated professionals such as architects, military engineers and accountants would work to
.for-why goes back to Old English times, over a thousand years ago. It was preserved in dialects in the US South, but was originally from English dialects on the other
.I don't think we are discussing whether quot;ananasquot; or quot;pineapplequot; was used first, but where it came from and why the English language does not use quot;ananasquot; today. I would
From quot;Why King George of England May Have to Lose His Beard: How the Game of 'Beaver' Which All England Is Playing Is So Threatening the Proper Reverence for the Throne That
Why not: I don't know why, but it seems to me Bob would sound a bit strange if he said, quot;Why is it that you have to get going?quot; Eliminating 'that' before 'Bob' would seem to be more in context
.According to the Online Etymology Dictionary, it comes from quot;fagquot;, meaning a loose piece of cloth:. fag (n.1) Look up fag at Dictionary British slang for quot;cigarettequot;
.Why would a piece of music be written with first and second endings that are the same? If President Trump's claimed authority to impose tariffs is taken away, who gets the 50
That's a very good question. It certainly is offensive here in the US, and I'm not sure why it's considered so much worse than other quot;Anglo-Saxonquot; words. I've used all of the other ones on
.Why would you do that? is less about tenses and more about expressing a somewhat negative surprise or amazement, sometimes enhanced by adding ever: Why would
.Why no, no more then reason. The OED doesn't explain why it is used in that manner. I can only speculate. First it was just a question expressing doubt reduced to its
.Why change register half way through? [ Of course, even in the middle ages, educated professionals such as architects, military engineers and accountants would work to
.for-why goes back to Old English times, over a thousand years ago. It was preserved in dialects in the US South, but was originally from English dialects on the other
.I don't think we are discussing whether quot;ananasquot; or quot;pineapplequot; was used first, but where it came from and why the English language does not use quot;ananasquot; today. I would
From quot;Why King George of England May Have to Lose His Beard: How the Game of 'Beaver' Which All England Is Playing Is So Threatening the Proper Reverence for the Throne That
Why not: I don't know why, but it seems to me Bob would sound a bit strange if he said, quot;Why is it that you have to get going?quot; Eliminating 'that' before 'Bob' would seem to be more in context
.According to the Online Etymology Dictionary, it comes from quot;fagquot;, meaning a loose piece of cloth:. fag (n.1) Look up fag at Dictionary British slang for quot;cigarettequot;
.Why would a piece of music be written with first and second endings that are the same? If President Trump's claimed authority to impose tariffs is taken away, who gets the 50
That's a very good question. It certainly is offensive here in the US, and I'm not sure why it's considered so much worse than other quot;Anglo-Saxonquot; words. I've used all of the other ones on
.Why would you do that? is less about tenses and more about expressing a somewhat negative surprise or amazement, sometimes enhanced by adding ever: Why would
.Why no, no more then reason. The OED doesn't explain why it is used in that manner. I can only speculate. First it was just a question expressing doubt reduced to its
.Why change register half way through? [ Of course, even in the middle ages, educated professionals such as architects, military engineers and accountants would work to
.for-why goes back to Old English times, over a thousand years ago. It was preserved in dialects in the US South, but was originally from English dialects on the other
.I don't think we are discussing whether quot;ananasquot; or quot;pineapplequot; was used first, but where it came from and why the English language does not use quot;ananasquot; today. I would
From quot;Why King George of England May Have to Lose His Beard: How the Game of 'Beaver' Which All England Is Playing Is So Threatening the Proper Reverence for the Throne That
Why not: I don't know why, but it seems to me Bob would sound a bit strange if he said, quot;Why is it that you have to get going?quot; Eliminating 'that' before 'Bob' would seem to be more in context
.According to the Online Etymology Dictionary, it comes from quot;fagquot;, meaning a loose piece of cloth:. fag (n.1) Look up fag at Dictionary British slang for quot;cigarettequot;
.Why would a piece of music be written with first and second endings that are the same? If President Trump's claimed authority to impose tariffs is taken away, who gets the 50
That's a very good question. It certainly is offensive here in the US, and I'm not sure why it's considered so much worse than other quot;Anglo-Saxonquot; words. I've used all of the other ones on
.Why would you do that? is less about tenses and more about expressing a somewhat negative surprise or amazement, sometimes enhanced by adding ever: Why would
.Why no, no more then reason. The OED doesn't explain why it is used in that manner. I can only speculate. First it was just a question expressing doubt reduced to its
.Why change register half way through? [ Of course, even in the middle ages, educated professionals such as architects, military engineers and accountants would work to
.for-why goes back to Old English times, over a thousand years ago. It was preserved in dialects in the US South, but was originally from English dialects on the other
.I don't think we are discussing whether quot;ananasquot; or quot;pineapplequot; was used first, but where it came from and why the English language does not use quot;ananasquot; today. I would
From quot;Why King George of England May Have to Lose His Beard: How the Game of 'Beaver' Which All England Is Playing Is So Threatening the Proper Reverence for the Throne That