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wump查看 wump 在百度字典中的解释百度英翻中〔查看〕
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  • What do mug and wump mean in mugwump? - English Language Usage . . .
    The word mugwump was derived from the Algonquin Indian word mugquomp See Etymonline It is complete coincidence that it can be broken into mug and wump But when people break it up like this, they do it because mug means face, and wump is a mispronunciation of rump, meaning rear end
  • Meaning of the phrase womp womp in American English?
    When I first read about the alleged joke, I charitably assumed that it meant, “What an embarrassing mistake by the agency They sure failed this time ” While that is an alternative possible meaning of womp-womp, it is not, according to Lewandowski himself, what he meant In his words, “ I mocked a liberal who attempted to politicize children as opposed to discussing the real issue
  • Which phrase is correct, dependent on or dependent upon?
    Which sentence is correct? My project is dependent upon your project completing My project is dependent on your project completing
  • At Night or In the Night? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Why do we refer to morning, afternoon and evening as 'in the morning', 'in the afternoon', 'in the evening' but not 'in the night' instead we say 'at night '
  • Hump, Rump, Lump, Bump - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    This is a rime; that is, it's the vowel nucleus plus coda of a monosyllable And many rimes have phonosemantic coherence As do assonances, that is, initial consonant clusters This particular one has a 3-Dimensional sense — an " ump " is something with three dimensions, roughly the same size in all three There are 15 such simplex words in English: lump clump dump plump hump slump jump rump
  • Most of which or most of whom or most of who?
    The who whom distinction is covered elsewhere (in the "most of…" context it's whom, but in modern usage who is often used), but this question brings up the legitimate question of distinguishing between when to use who and when to use which For this, simply consider whether the collection you're describing consists of people or not There were 10 postmen, most of whom wore hats There were 5
  • Another word for ensure but less absolute - English Language Usage . . .
    The word promote is less absolute than ensure, but it won't fit your sentence What would make your sentence make sense would be to drop the and and insert so that The lesser level of certainty will be carried over from the earlier phrase hope to make I hope to make universal design the standard practice so that no person feels excluded from an activity, commodity, or opportunity due to a
  • No, I dont or No, I do not in responding English questions
    They are equivalent grammatically Current usage contradicts this by assigning "I do not" more emphasis over the almost universally spoken "I don't" Speakers often add an extra layer of emphatic intonation to "I do not", meant to make it sound even more serious
  • technical - Usage of w. r. t. in academic papers - English Language . . .
    Is it possible to use the abbreviation "w r t " in academic papers?
  • Pissed vs Pissed off - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    In Australian English there has always been a distinction between "pissed" (intoxicated) and "pissed off" (angry, irritated) I've noticed a trend towards the American usage where "he was really





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