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Concordance index for 'ex' onwards
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:ex-mother-in-law-to-be
- Lawler: Tense and related topics: 1
:ex-wife
- Lawler: Tense and related topics: 1
:exact :exactly
- Abbreviations:
Unedited list of search results
: 1
- FX: ", vs ,": 1
- FX: "Eskimo": 1
- FX: "Go figure": 1
- FX: "blue moon": 1
- FX: "cut the mustard": 1
- FX: Dictionaries: 1
- FX: Doubling of final consonants before suffixes: 1
- FX: Preposition at end: 1
- IPA II:
The [O] sound requires rounded lips, but lips making a
: 1
- IPA I: Note 1: The remarks concerning the pronunciation of [O] were taken verbatim from Mark Israel's AUE FAQ. Some AUE contributors have expressed the opinion
: 1
- Intro G: AUE Intro G: Where is the FAQ?: 1
- Lawler: -- more followup:: 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: I can't say _____ really means I can't say ___ in a word. When I go: 1
- Lawler: Since you ask, here's a moderately complete list of polarity items,: 1
- Lawler: "Quote, Unquote": 1
- Lawler: A or An Historical Novel?: 1
- Lawler: Aural and Oral, Boy and Buoy: 1
- Lawler: Bring vs Take: 1
- Lawler: Can't Help (But) ...: 1
- Lawler: Commas again: 1
- Lawler: Extraposition, plus Selected Short Subjects: 2
- Lawler: Henry Lee Smith: 1
- Lawler: Literacy: 1
- Lawler: Phrasal Verbs: 1
- Lawler: Phrasal Verbs: 1
- Lawler: Quantifier-Negative Semantics: 1
- Lawler: striddly: 2
- Links: Collections of Web links
: 1
- UCLE04: Language and Usenet FAQs
: 3
- UCLE04: Our Favourite Cultural and Language Links
: 63
- UCLE04: ucle links: 1
- UCLE08: Britannia: Her history,
: 2
- UCLE15:
The Tooth Fairy
: 1
- Where FAQ?:
Original FAQ, no hypertext:
: 1
- AUE: London Symposium Boink, September 1998: 1
- Explanatory notes:
: 1
:exaggerate :exaggerated :exaggeratedly :exaggeration :exalt :Exaltation :exalted :Exam :examination :examine :examined :examining :example
- Abbreviations:
Unedited list of search results
: 1
- Cunningham: Comments: 1
- FX: "It's me" vs "It is I": 1
- FX: "beg the question": 2
- FX: "cut the mustard": 2
- FX: "cut to the chase": 1
- FX: "ebonics": 2
- FX: "fall off a turnip truck": 1
- FX: "hopefully", "thankfully": 2
- FX: "like" vs "as": 1
- FX: "like" vs "such as": 5
- FX: "push the envelope": 1
- FX: "whole cloth": 1
- FX: "you saying" vs "your saying": 1
- FX: Commonest words: 1
- FX: FOREIGNERS' FAQS: 2
- FX: Gender-neutral pronouns: 1
- FX: Postfix "not": 2
- FX: What is "ghoti"?: 1
- FX: When to use "the": 1
- FX: Where to put apostrophes in possessive forms: 3
- FX: Words without vowels: 1
- Groups: AUE: "company is" and "company are": 2
- I before E:
Examples of exceptions to the rule:
: 1
- IPA II:
Consonants and Vowels:
: 1
- IPA II:
The [O] sound requires rounded lips, but lips making a
: 2
- IPA II: The reference to 'Chicago pop' first appeared in Mark Israel's
: 2
- IPA I:
Affricates, diphthongs and triphthongs
: 1
- IPA I:
Writing ASCII IPA
: 1
- IPA I:
Slashes or square brackets?
: 2
- IPA I:
About the sound files
: 2
- IPA I:
Consonants and vowels
: 1
- IPA I:
Reading ASCII IPA
: 4
- IPA I: Note 1: The remarks concerning the pronunciation of [O] were taken verbatim from Mark Israel's AUE FAQ. Some AUE contributors have expressed the opinion
: 2
- IPA I: Note 2: The reference to 'Chicago pop' first appeared in Mark Israel's AUE FAQ, and I [Bob Cunningham] believe it was copied from there by Markus Laker for inclusion in his
: 2
- Intro A:
Dictionary Abbreviations
: 1
- Intro B:
Historical English, and English Literature
: 2
- Intro D:
"If I was" -v- "If I were"
: 1
- Intro D:
Where to put apostrophes in possessive forms
: 1
- Intro E:
U.S. -v- REST-OF-WORLD ENGLISH
: 1
- Intro E:
What is "ghoti"?
: 1
- Lawler: --- Followup --: 1
- Lawler: >> For instance: English has only one phoneme, but it has: 1
- Lawler: >> That is, the voicing assimilation that makes these morphemes voiceless: 1
- Lawler: >Past tenses:: 1
- Lawler: >Your example of English and Caxton print shop goes a long way to convince: 1
- Lawler: I can't say _____ really means I can't say ___ in a word. When I go: 2
- Lawler: The intonation curve is (roughly) up-down-back.up, graphically something: 1
- Lawler: "It" in "It's raining": 1
- Lawler: "amn't": 1
- Lawler: "only": 2
- Lawler: A or An Historical Novel?: 2
- Lawler: Alumin(i)um: 1
- Lawler: As far as ... goes/is concerned: 1
- Lawler: Canadian and American Raising: 1
- Lawler: Commas again: 1
- Lawler: English L sounds: 1
- Lawler: English Language History, with excursus on Technology: 4
- Lawler: English and Infinity: 1
- Lawler: Gotten vs. Got: 3
- Lawler: Hafta and Other Modal Paraphrases: 2
- Lawler: Headline grammar: 1
- Lawler: Hyphens: 2
- Lawler: Negative Polarity Items: 2
- Lawler: Object Complements: 1
- Lawler: Phrasal Verbs: 1
- Lawler: Reams: 1
- Lawler: Schwa and Central Vowels: 1
- Lawler: So Much For Spelling Reform: 2
- Lawler: Tense and related topics: 1
- Lawler: That vs. Which: 1
- Lawler: Verbing Nouns: 1
- Lawler: anymore: 2
- Lawler: gonna: 2
- Lawler: hadn't've: 1
- Lawler: striddly: 1
- Links: Dictionaries
: 1
- Subjunctive?: AUE: Does English Have a Subjunctive Mood?: 1
- UCLE06: Rhetorical vocabulary: 2
- UCLE07: Some significant numbers from literature and literary criticism: 1
- UCLE09: “Bloody”
: 1
- UCLE09: Anorak
: 1
- UCLE15:
The Tooth Fairy
: 1
- What's new?:
2 September 2001:
: 1
- Yaelf: (WD) I have heard an American friend of mine use the phrase kitty corner to describe things that are diagonally opposed, as for example: 'The drugstore is kitty corner to the ice-cream parlor'. Have you heard this phrase before and do you have any clue a: 1
- e-mail vs email: AUE: Preferences, "e-mail" vs "email": 1
- AUE: Search Information: 1
- AUE: Speech Examples: 1
- AUE: Worldwide Distribution of English Speakers: 1
- Preface
: 2
:examples :exams :exasperation
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