
Speeded vs. Sped - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
Apr 28, 2017 · So sped has been preferred over speeded for as long as the corpus data goes back. Generally speaking, irregular verbs tend to become regular over time, rather than the …
How would you describe a car kicking up clouds of dust as an …
Mar 2, 2021 · In English, we tend to relate to the cause of something (cause and effect). Hence your car kicking up clouds of dust. But this is not the only way to describe the scene. We can …
"Suped-up": is it a real idiom (vs souped-up)
Apr 13, 2017 · Both sources below attest that the correct more common spelling is soup-up. Suped-up and sooped-up are are just misspellings. The expression is AmE in origin and it …
word choice - What types of sounds do cars make? - English …
Mar 27, 2012 · Modern cars aren't supposed to make much noise at all. There's the comfort of travellers and the general public near the highway to consider, not to mention the fact that fuel …
Is the correct usage to say "speed passed" or "speed past"
Apr 25, 2018 · I will speed past the cop. 'will speed' - is the verb phrase. 'past' - is an adverb meaning - 'to pass from one side to another' How will you speed? quickly? slowly? or past? 'to …
Etymology of "div" meaning "a stupid or foolish person"
Acting like a div yesterday: a stupid or foolish person I started to wonder how this term of abuse came about. Urban Dictionary has a quaint tale: Actually originates from prison slang in the UK...
Idiom to refer to a person who is tight with money
Jun 4, 2023 · Is there an idiom that describes a person who is tight with his/her money, never wants to chip in or treat themselves or others and worries too much about money?
'it took me a long time' vs 'I took a long time' to do x
Jun 18, 2023 · Merriam-Webster arguably lists the sense of the highly polysemous verb 'take' used in the first example: take [10]e (2): to use up (space, time, etc.) [require] it takes a long …
Exact meaning behind the phrase: 'I'm not here to...'
Jan 12, 2022 · Could someone please explain the exact meaning of 'I'm not here to'? I've found info that it might possibly show some sort of disapproval of the speaker and that they don't …
etymology - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
Jan 14, 2020 · Walt Whitman: Many the burials, many the days and nights, passing away, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow: Many the souls that sped, Many the hearts that bled, By our stern orders.