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tzar查看 tzar 在百度字典中的解释百度英翻中〔查看〕
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  • orthography - Czar vs tsar - origins and pronunciation - English . . .
    How did the word come into English with the two variants czar and tsar? The 'ts' spelling is a transliteration of the Russian 'царь', but the 'cz' spelling is what interests me more To me it looks
  • Spelling etymology of czar [duplicate] - English Language Usage . . .
    Russian emperors are usually referred to as "Tsars" or "Czars" However, while the first spelling (Tsar) utilises the standard English transliteration of the Cyrillic ц as ts, the second transliter
  • Whats the name of the room where you watch a movie inside the movie . . .
    In Portuguese we call quot;Rooms quot; the places inside the movie theater where we actually watch the movie What are they called in English? I searched, even in movie tickets, but only found quot;
  • What term describes a person who always remains ill?
    It might not be a word currently used because of correctness, but "a person who mostly always remains ill due multiple factors" would be an invalid Wiktionary: (dated, sometimes offensive) Any person with a disability or illness (dated, sometimes offensive) A person who is confined to home or bed because of illness, disability or injury; one who is too sick or weak to care for themselves
  • capitalization - Is the T in the capitalized when referring to a . . .
    According to the Oxford Learner’s Dictionary, the answer is no, you shouldn’t capitalise the article for a royal house: the House of Windsor ðə ˌhaʊs əv ˈwɪnzə (r) ðə ˌhaʊs əv ˈwɪnzər the name of the British royal family since 1917 when it was changed from Saxe-Coburg-Gotha The Oxford English Dictionary also quotes the House of Windsor with an uncapitalised ‘the
  • What does the punctuation mean? - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    comes from programming and is generally used to denote a comment or explanation that should be ignored by the compiler or computer Its purpose is to leave notes and instructions for future programmers or anyone else that needs to understand what is happening in code The literary equivalent is a footnote In the examples you provide, the words following the are comments of emotions or
  • Capitalization of process names, specific terms etc (when is something . . .
    If you have your own specific names for events and processes for which you often use an abbreviation, the document would be clearer if you capitalise TEM as "Time and Energy Monitoring" when you use it in full It's then plain that isn't a casual phrase but a specific term People generally only read the manual when they need to know something So the clearer, the better Perhaps even bolden
  • What’s the origin and history of the phrase “ten foot pole”?
    According to Dictionary com the phrase, ‘ Not touch (something someone) with a ten-foot pole’, dates back to the mid-eighteenth century: This expression dates from the mid-1700s, when it began to replace the earlier not to be handled with a pair of tongs In the 1800s barge-pole was sometimes substituted for ten-foot pole, but that variant has died out But where does it come from?
  • count - How do you refer to number of siblings? - English Language . . .
    Thank you for the response However, how would I refer to the number of siblings and still use the word siblings within the sentence? Or perhaps what would be a better way to word it?
  • grammar - Which one is correct? the last or last - English Language . . .
    "last Saturday" means the previous Saturday, the one before we are talking "the last Saturday" means the final Saturday in a period of time So "The last Saturday in November" is perfectly correct So is "I haven't read a book since last Saturday"; but also "I haven't read a book since the last Saturday of November" "the last Saturday" without a qualification would mean the final Saturday of





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