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Concordance index for 'al' onwards
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:Alabama :Alador :alamein :alan :AlanB :alang :Alanus :alarm :alas
- Lawler: As to this discussion, the usual oppositions are those between: 1
- Lawler: >> That is, the voicing assimilation that makes these morphemes voiceless: 1
- Lawler: Beth Levin is a computational linguist at Northwestern University: 1
- Lawler: That is, the voicing assimilation that makes these morphemes voiceless: 1
- Lawler: Commas: 1
- Lawler: That vs. Which: 1
- UCLE08: Britannia: Her history,
: 1
- Yaelf: In Europe, Going Global Means, Alas, English: 1
- AUE: Comments on a Proposal for Reformed English Spelling: 1
:Alasdair
- Cunningham: Individual poster histories - alt.usage.english: 1
:Alaska :Albanowski
- Cunningham: Individual poster histories - alt.usage.english: 1
:albatross :albeit :Albert :Alberta :Albertopolis :AlbertPeasemarch
- Cunningham: Individual poster histories - alt.usage.english: 1
:Albion :album :alchemy :alcohol :alcoholic :Alcopop :Aldborough :Alderney :Alderson :ale :ale-house :alea :Aleatory :alec
- Cunningham: Individual poster histories - alt.usage.english: 5
- Wilton: Smart Alec: 1
:Alegar :aleng :alert :Alex
- Cunningham: Individual poster histories - alt.usage.english: 3
:Alexander :Alexandria :alexia :Alexipharmic :alexy
- Cunningham: Individual poster histories - alt.usage.english: 1
:Alfred :algebra :Alger :Algonquian :Algonquians :Algonquin :algorithm :algorithms :Ali :alias :alibi :Alice
- Cunningham: Individual poster histories - alt.usage.english: 1
- Lawler: The intonation curve is (roughly) up-down-back.up, graphically something: 1
- Lawler: English L sounds: 1
- UCLE10: The
: 1
:alien :aliens :ALIGN :align :alike :aliquot :alittle :alive :ALL :all
- AWWY: All that Jazz; jazz: 1
- AWWY: All the Weigh; balance; ponder; pound: 1
- AWWY: All-American boy (Jack Armstrong); American boy, All (Jack Armstrong); Armstrong, Jack; Jack Armstrong, Grit, and Gung-Ho; grit; gung-ho: 2
- AWWY: Anna Jarvis (Mother's Day); day, Mother's; Jarvis, Anna (Mother's Day); Mother of all Days, the: 1
- AWWY: Letting Our Hair Down...Hair of the Dog; crewcut (puritanical); dog hair; dogbite treatment; haircut, get a; hairy, feeling; hang out, letting it all; homeopathic principle (likes are cured by likes); letting it all hang out; little hair of the dog: 2
- AWWY: The Nose Knows; iniquity, odor of; joint, nose out of; Marcellus in Hamlet (something is rotten in the state of Denmark); Nose Knows, the; nose out of joint; odor of sanctity/iniquity; rotten in the state of Denmark, something is (The Nose Knows); smell a rat; stunk to high heaven; what's the stink really all about?: 1
- AWWY: all ears; In One Ear; euphemism; euphonious; goes in one ear and out the other; music to ears; Utopia: 1
- AWWY: all wool and a yard wide; dyed-in-the-wool; Woolgathering; yard wide, all wool and a: 2
- AWWY: ax to grind; Burying the Hatchet and an Ax to Grind; Borden, Lizzie (ax to grind); grind, an ax to; hatchet, burying the; Lizzie Borden (ax to grind); unkindest cut of all: 1
- AWWY: between the devil and the deep blue sea; Devil...Blue sea...All Hell to Pay; hell to pay; hot pitch, devil to pay and (original phrase): 1
- AWWY: deviating; devious; laughing all the way to the bank; obviates; obvious; previously; trivia; Trivial Pursuit: 1
- Abbreviations:
Unedited list of search results
: 8
- Alternating voices: AUE: Sound samples, Markus and Skitt: 1
- Audio:
Arthur the Rat
: 1
- Audio:
Bother, father caught...
: 1
- Audio:
Credits
: 1
- Brians: all goes well/augurs well: 1
- Brians: all: 1
- Brians: altogether/ all together: 1
- Brians: intense/intensive: 1
- Brians: not all that: 1
- Brians: second of all: 1
- Cunningham: Comments: 1
- Cunningham: Explanatory Remarks: 1
- Cunningham: Multiple IDs: : 2
- Cunningham: Note B:: 1
- Emphasis quotes: AUE: Use of Quotation Marks for Emphasis: 3
- FX: "Bob's your uncle": 3
- FX: "Eskimo": 4
- FX: "God rest you merry, gentlemen": 1
- FX: "It needs cleaned": 1
- FX: "It's me" vs "It is I": 2
- FX: "Let them eat cake!": 2
- FX: "O.K.": 5
- FX: "The exception proves the rule.": 1
- FX: "There's a sucker born every minute": 1
- FX: "all ... not": 24
- FX: "alright": 2
- FX: "beg the question": 2
- FX: "blue moon": 1
- FX: "catch-22": 1
- FX: "copacetic": 2
- FX: "could care less": 1
- FX: "different to", "different than": 1
- FX: "ebonics": 1
- FX: "eighty-six"="nix": 2
- FX: "face the music": 1
- FX: "fuck": 2
- FX: "hell for leather": 1
- FX: "like" vs "such as": 1
- FX: "more than you can shake a stick at": 2
- FX: "mouses" vs "mice": 1
- FX: "ollie ollie oxen free": 5
- FX: "quality": 1
- FX: "shall" vs "will", "should" vs "would": 2
- FX: "suck"="be very unsatisfying": 3
- FX: "the whole nine yards": 2
- FX: "titsling"/"brassiere": 1
- FX: "to all intents and purposes": 4
- FX: "true fact": 1
- FX: "try and", "be sure and", "go" + verb: 1
- FX: "whom": 1
- FX: "wonk": 1
- FX: Biblical sense of "to know": 1
- FX: Commonest words: 1
- FX: Dictionaries: 2
- FX: Do publishers put false info in dictionaries to catch plagiarists?: 1
- FX: E-prime: 1
- FX: FOREIGNERS' FAQS: 2
- FX: Gender-neutral pronouns: 1
- FX: How do Americans pronounce "dog"?: 2
- FX: How reliable are dictionaries?: 1
- FX: How to represent pronunciation in ASCII: 5
- FX: Names of "&", "@", and "#": 1
- FX: Online dictionaries: 1
- FX: Online language columns: 2
- FX: Plurals of Latin/Greek words: 3
- FX: Preposition at end: 2
- FX: Related newsgroups: 1
- FX: Rhotic vs non-rhotic, intrusive "r": 1
- FX: Spelling reform: 1
- FX: Subjunctive: 1
- FX: WELCOME TO ALT.USAGE.ENGLISH!: 1
- FX: What do you call the grass strip between the road and the sidewalk?: 1
- FX: What is "ghoti"?: 1
- FX: What words are their own antonym?: 2
- FX: When to use "the": 1
- FX: Where to put apostrophes in possessive forms: 4
- FX: Why do we say "30 years old", but "a 30-year-old man"?: 1
- FX: Words ending in "-gry": 2
- FX: Words pronounced differently according to context: 1
- FX: Words whose spelling has influenced their pronunciation: 1
- FX: Words without vowels: 1
- FX: [Prefatory remarks]: 1
- Fast FAQ:
[Prefatory remarks]
: 2
- Garbl: all of: 1
- Garbl: all ready, already: 1
- Garbl: all right: 1
- Garbl: all, any, most, some: 1
- Garbl: all-round: 1
- Garbl: almost all: 1
- Garbl: at all times: 1
- Garbl: none at all: 1
- Garbl: of all: 1
- Genitive: AUE: Genitive is Not Always Possessive: 2
- I before E:
Examples of exceptions to the rule:
: 2
- I before E:
Extensions to the rule that have been suggested:
: 2
- I before E:
My suggested conclusion:
: 1
- IPA II:
[*]
: 1
- IPA II:
About this document:
: 1
- IPA II:
Many U.S. speakers substitute [@] for [V"], so they would
: 1
- IPA II:
Some U.S. speakers do not distinguish between "Mary",
: 2
- IPA II:
The [O] sound requires rounded lips, but lips making a
: 1
- IPA II: Affricates, diphthongs and triphthongs:
: 1
- IPA II: The difference between [hw] and [w] does not
: 1
- IPA I:
About the sound files
: 1
- IPA I:
About the sound files
: 1
- IPA I:
Affricates, diphthongs and triphthongs
: 1
- IPA I:
Affricates, diphthongs and triphthongs
: 1
- IPA I:
Affricates, diphthongs and triphthongs
: 1
- IPA I:
Reading ASCII IPA
: 4
- IPA I:
Reading ASCII IPA
: 4
- IPA I:
Writing ASCII IPA
: 1
- IPA I:
Writing ASCII IPA
: 1
- IPA I:
Writing ASCII IPA
: 1
- IPA I:
Slashes or square brackets?
: 3
- IPA I:
Slashes or square brackets?
: 3
- IPA I:
Slashes or square brackets?
: 3
- IPA I:
What is this?
: 1
- IPA I:
What is this?
: 1
- IPA I:
What is this?
: 1
- IPA I:
A quick look
: 1
- IPA I:
Credits
: 2
- IPA I:
*
: 1
- IPA I:
*
: 1
- IPA I:
A
: 1
- IPA I:
A
: 1
- IPA I:
O
: 2
- IPA I:
O
: 2
- IPA I:
V
: 1
- IPA I:
V
: 1
- IPA I:
V"
: 1
- IPA I:
V"
: 1
- IPA I:
hw
: 1
- IPA I:
hw
: 1
- IPA I:
oU
: 1
- IPA I:
oU
: 1
- IPA I:
<+>
: 1
- IPA I:
<+>
: 1
- IPA I:
<+>
: 1
- IPA I:
A quick look
: 1
- IPA I:
About the sound files
: 1
- IPA I:
Credits
: 2
- IPA I:
Credits
: 2
- IPA I:
Reading ASCII IPA
: 4
- IPA I:
/h&N/ 0
: 1
- IPA I:
British
: 1
- IPA I: Note 1: The difference between [hw] and [w] does not usually affect meaning (common exceptions being while/wile and whether/weather) and many speakers never use [hw] at all.
: 1
- IPA I: Note 2: Many British accents use [oU], rather than [@U], before /l/ in certain positions. These accents would say [ koUld]. Some other British accents use [oU] for /@U/ all the time.
: 1
- IPA I: Note 3: Some U.S. speakers do not distinguish between "Mary", "merry", and "marry" 3. Among those who use the same vowel in 'Mary', 'merry', and 'marry', not all of them have the common vowel /E/ in the three words.
: 2
- IPA I: Note 3: Among those who use the same vowel in 'Mary', 'merry', and 'marry', not all of them have the common vowel /E/ in the three words.
: 2
- IPA I: Note 3: Among those who use the same vowel in 'Mary', 'merry', and 'marry', not all of them have the common vowel /E/ in the three words.
: 2
- Intro A:
WELCOME TO alt.usage.english!
: 1
- Intro C:
"whole nine yards"
: 1
- Intro C:
American
: 1
- Intro D:
"Gotten"
: 1
- Intro D:
Acronyms and other abbreviations using initial letters
: 1
- Intro D:
Why do we say "30 years old" but "a 30-year-old man"?
: 1
- Intro G: AUE Intro G: Where is the FAQ?: 1
- Isles:
BRITISH ISLES. A geographical term referring to the islands
: 1
- Isles:
CHANNEL ISLANDS, ISLE OF MAN. Note that the Isle of Man
: 1
- Isles:
GREAT BRITAIN. Used by cartographers to denote the biggest
: 1
- Isles:
NORTHERN IRELAND This is not the place to go into
: 1
- Lawler: As to this discussion, the usual oppositions are those between: 2
- Lawler: The canonical paraphrase for will is be going to, idiosyncratically: 1
- Lawler: There is also another opposition among the formal auxiliaries, between: 3
- Lawler: -- more followup:: 3
- Lawler: >> For instance: English has only one phoneme, but it has: 3
- Lawler: >> That is, the voicing assimilation that makes these morphemes voiceless: 3
- Lawler: >>> The facts of the matter are these:: 3
- Lawler: >Just one question: Where does the past perfect ("have gone", "have sung"): 1
- Lawler: >Past tenses:: 9
- Lawler: >Your example of English and Caxton print shop goes a long way to convince: 1
- Lawler: Beth Levin is a computational linguist at Northwestern University: 7
- Lawler: I can't say _____ really means I can't say ___ in a word. When I go: 10
- Lawler: I suspect much of the rancor that greets spellings of had've is: 1
- Lawler: Since you ask, here's a moderately complete list of polarity items,: 4
- Lawler: The intonation curve is (roughly) up-down-back.up, graphically something: 2
- Lawler: Where I grew up (in DeKalb, IL, 100 km W of Chicago) Mary,: 1
- Lawler: You may have noticed the Sapir quotation in my .sig.: 3
- Lawler: "Correctness": 3
- Lawler: "It" in "It's raining": 5
- Lawler: "Quote, Unquote": 2
- Lawler: "amn't": 4
- Lawler: "equally" and comparatives: 1
- Lawler: "only": 2
- Lawler: "vehicle": 3
- Lawler: A or An Historical Novel?: 2
- Lawler: Alumin(i)um: 3
- Lawler: As far as ... goes/is concerned: 2
- Lawler: Aural and Oral, Boy and Buoy: 2
- Lawler: Books on English, Language, and Linguistics: 1
- Lawler: Bring vs Take: 5
- Lawler: Can't Help (But) ...: 3
- Lawler: Canadian and American Raising: 2
- Lawler: Commas again: 2
- Lawler: Commas: 1
- Lawler: English L sounds: 1
- Lawler: English Language History, with excursus on Technology: 7
- Lawler: English Modals: 1
- Lawler: English and Infinity: 3
- Lawler: Extraposition, plus Selected Short Subjects: 1
- Lawler: Give a Damn: 4
- Lawler: Gotten vs. Got: 7
- Lawler: Hafta and Other Modal Paraphrases: 3
- Lawler: He, she, they?: 3
- Lawler: Headline grammar: 1
- Lawler: Henry Lee Smith: 2
- Lawler: Hyphens: 5
- Lawler: Indian English: 3
- Lawler: Literacy: 3
- Lawler: Negative Polarity Items: 9
- Lawler: News Item: 4
- Lawler: Object Complements: 10
- Lawler: Phrasal Verbs: 1
- Lawler: Phrasal Verbs: 2
- Lawler: Quantifier-Negative Semantics: 38
- Lawler: Reams: 6
- Lawler: Schwa and Central Vowels: 6
- Lawler: So Much For Spelling Reform: 3
- Lawler: Tense and related topics: 4
- Lawler: That vs. Which: 1
- Lawler: The Academy: 3
- Lawler: There are also two kinds of relative clauses:: 2
- Lawler: Toward(s) and Beside(s): 2
- Lawler: Usage of "the hell": 4
- Lawler: Who(m): 3
- Lawler: anymore: 3
- Lawler: gonna: 4
- Lawler: hadn't've: 3
- Lawler: striddly: 1
- Lawler: zilch: 1
- Links: Discussion groups, Usenet group Websites
: 3
- Links: Fun with words
: 1
- Links: Learning English
: 1
- Links: Miscellaneous, language related
: 2
- Links: Miscellaneous, not language related
: 2
- Links: Notes
: 1
- Links: Online services
: 1
- Links: Rhetoric vocabulary
: 1
- Links: Web-design utilities
: 1
- Lynch: All of.: 1
- Morris: All She Wrote, That's: 1
- Morris: Alright/All Right: 1
- Quinion: All mouth and trousers: 1
- Quinion: All my eye and Betty Martin: 1
- Quinion: All wool and a yard wide: 1
- Quinion: It's (all) Greek to me: 2
- RH WotD: all told: 1
- RH WotD: be-all and end-all: 2
- RH WotD: mother of all: 1
- Symposium II: AUE: The Christmas symposium, London, December 1998: 1
- UCLE02: The history of ucle: 1
- UCLE03: Judith
: 2
- UCLE03: Lindsay
: 3
- UCLE05: John Davies's commentary
: 1
- UCLE05: What’s
: 2
- UCLE07: Some significant numbers from literature and literary criticism: 1
- UCLE08: London’s
: 1
- UCLE09: “Bloody”
: 1
- UCLE09: “It went pear-shaped”
: 1
- UCLE09: Holidays
: 1
- UCLE09: Rivers
: 1
- UCLE10: "Bite the bullet"
: 2
- UCLE10: American belts
: 1
- UCLE10: The
: 1
- UCLE12: News
: 6
- UCLE13: The Curse of Macbeth
: 1
- UCLE15: Gossip
: 2
- UCLE15: Scuttlebutt, Grapevine,
: 1
- What's new?:
2 September 2001:
: 1
- What's new?:
23 February 2002
: 1
- Where FAQ?:
Berna Slikker's version (19 February 1996):
: 2
- Where FAQ?:
Brian Tung's version (15 August 1995):
: 1
- Where FAQ?: Single-page FAQ with internal links:
: 1
- Where FAQ?: Version with links to Amazon (2 October 1996):
: 1
- Wilton: All Your Base Are Belong To Us: 1
- Yaelf: (WD) What is the origin of "that's all she wrote"?: 1
- Yaelf: (WD) What is the origin of "to have a millstone around one's neck"? "put through the mill"? "all is grist for the mill"? "keeping your nose to the grindstone"? "run of the mill"?: 1
- Yaelf: A monster online dictionary of the rich colourful language we call slang... all from a British perspective, with new slang added every month.: 1
- Yaelf: These pages contain words and expressions you most likely won't find in a normal dictionary. This is an experimental "internet collaborative project", which means that all entries are made by internet users: 1
- 1. England
: 1
- 11. The Commonwealth
: 2
- 5. The United Kingdom and Islands
: 1
- 8. The European Territories of the United Kingdom
: 1
- 9. The European Union
: 2
- A ucle resource page: 1
- A ucle resource page: 1
- AUE Gallery: Laura Spira as the Queen of Hearts: 1
- AUE: "anymore" and "any more": 1
- AUE: About the alt.usage.english newsgroup: 1
- AUE: Additional comments about deja.com: 2
- AUE: Analysis of Some Mark Barratt Vowels: 1
- AUE: Arthur the Rat: 3
- AUE: Audio recording technique - some suggestions: 1
- AUE: Comments on a Proposal for Reformed English Spelling: 1
- AUE: Does Mark Barratt's recording of "catamaran" have a plosive "t"?: 2
- AUE: Georgia speaker comments: 1
- AUE: Grammar Books: 2
- AUE: Is 'people' the plural of 'person'?: 1
- AUE: More Totally Officially Unknown People: 1
- AUE: Perlfect Search: 2
- AUE: Plural Formation: 1
- AUE: Search Information: 1
- AUE: Summer Boink, London, June 1999: 4
- AUE: Totally Officially Unknown People: 1
- AUE: What is prescriptivism?: 1
- AUE: What is the UK? Is it the same as Britain, Great Britain or England?: 5
- Cambodunum
: 49
- Fieldfares
: 3
- Preface
: 20
- The AUE Photo Gallery: 1
- The Aim Of This Document
: 1
- The Poetry of F. W. Moorman: 1
:all's :all-ee :all-embracing :All-newness :all-time :Allan :Alle :allege :alleged :allegedly :allegiance :allegorical :allegory
- Yaelf: What is the difference between "allegory" and "parable"?: 1
:Allen :alleviated :Alley-apple :allied :alligator :alliterate :alliteration :alliterative :Allohistory :allophone
- Lawler: >> That is, the voicing assimilation that makes these morphemes voiceless: 1
- Links: Dictionaries
: 1
:allophones :allophonic :allot :allotted :allotting :allow :allowances :allowed :allowing :ALLOWS :allows :alls :alltime :allude :alludes :allusion :allusions :alluvial
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