| Thread | Last Post | Replies |
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| Dr WHO - etymology of Daleks | 28 Aug 2008 18:26 GMT | 29 |
I remember at school there was a combined volume of "Billy Liar" and "The Loneliness of The Long Distance Runner" ubiquitous to the "English Rooms". I thought the latter to be
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| else vs. otherwise | 09 Aug 2008 11:28 GMT | 2 |
Pardon the intrusion, I was hoping someone could help me out understanding the subtle differences (if any) between 'else' and 'otherwise' in the following. What's better:
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| killer, assassin and murderer | 09 Aug 2008 10:15 GMT | 11 |
please explain me, what's the difference between these three synonyms: killer, assassin and murderer? for example in the movie "unforgiven" in the beginning the titles say that Clint's hero was a murderer and later on his dead friend was
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| cnn/business_international:"Ich bin ein berliner" | 03 Aug 2008 07:09 GMT | 1 |
Yesterday night there was a cool interview with Mr Obama, with an american reporter in Berlin. The journalist asked a couple of time, why Mr Obama come to Berlin. Well, you know, I suppose that the trip in Berlin sounds silently just like-Ich bin ein berliner- into the US
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| Go and wend | 01 Aug 2008 23:58 GMT | 8 |
In article <6fdipnFb354pU1@mid.individual.net>, Einde O'Callaghan <einde.ocallaghan@planet-interkom.de> wrote:
> According to some studies 25% of verbs in Old English (Anglo-Saxon) > were irregular whereas now only 3% are. |