|
Concordance index for 'has' onwards
|
[Go to the Concordance Main Index]
:HAS :has
- AUE Logo: AUE: The Totally Official Logo: 3
- AWWY: Lassie has Her Day; Canis Major (the dog star constellation); dog days of summer; dog has his day, every; every dog has his day; Lassie Has Her Day; Sirius, the dog star; St. Bernard and dogs: 4
- Abbreviations:
Unedited list of search results
: 1
- Audio:
Other Sound Files
: 1
- Cunningham: Comments: 1
- Cunningham: Explanatory Remarks: 2
- Cunningham: Multiple IDs: : 5
- Cunningham: Note A:: 1
- Emphasis quotes: AUE: Use of Quotation Marks for Emphasis: 2
- FX: ", vs ,": 1
- FX: "-er" vs "-re": 2
- FX: "-ize" vs "-ise": 1
- FX: "A.D.": 2
- FX: "Caesarean section": 1
- FX: "Go placidly amid the noise and the haste" (Desiderata): 1
- FX: "God rest you merry, gentlemen": 1
- FX: "It's me" vs "It is I": 1
- FX: "Jingle Bells": 3
- FX: "O.K.": 2
- FX: "Take the prisoner downstairs", said Tom condescendingly.: 1
- FX: "The die is cast.": 2
- FX: "all ... not": 2
- FX: "beg the question": 1
- FX: "billion": a U.K. view: 3
- FX: "blue moon": 3
- FX: "canola": 2
- FX: "catch-22": 1
- FX: "could care less": 1
- FX: "cut to the chase": 2
- FX: "done"="finished": 1
- FX: "due to": 1
- FX: "fall off a turnip truck": 2
- FX: "flammable": 1
- FX: "fuck": 1
- FX: "functionality": 2
- FX: "go to hell in a handbasket": 2
- FX: "hopefully", "thankfully": 5
- FX: "impact"="to affect": 1
- FX: "in like Flynn": 2
- FX: "jerry-built"/"jury-rigged": 2
- FX: "kangaroo": 1
- FX: "less" vs "fewer": 1
- FX: "like" vs "as": 2
- FX: "like" vs "such as": 2
- FX: "mind your p's and q's": 1
- FX: "more than you can shake a stick at": 1
- FX: "nimrod": 1
- FX: "ollie ollie oxen free": 2
- FX: "pie-shaped": 1
- FX: "politically correct": 1
- FX: "posh": 1
- FX: "push the envelope": 2
- FX: "quality": 3
- FX: "scot-free": 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 call a spade a spade": 2
- FX: "wait for the other shoe to drop": 1
- FX: "whole cloth": 2
- FX: "ye"="the": 1
- FX: Books on Britishisms, Canadianisms, etc.: 3
- FX: Books on phrase origins: 1
- FX: Books on rhyming slang: 1
- FX: Books on usage: 3
- FX: Commonest words: 1
- FX: Diacritics: 1
- FX: Dictionaries: 3
- FX: Do publishers put false info in dictionaries to catch plagiarists?: 1
- FX: Does the next millennium begin in 2000 or 2001?: 1
- FX: E-prime: 1
- FX: English is Tough Stuff: 1
- FX: Etymologies of personal names: 1
- FX: Gender-neutral pronouns: 5
- FX: Guidelines for posting: 1
- FX: How do you spell "e-mail"?: 3
- FX: How reliable are dictionaries?: 2
- FX: How to represent pronunciation in ASCII: 5
- FX: I before E except after C: 3
- FX: Joke about step-by-step spelling reform: 1
- FX: Names of "&", "@", and "#": 2
- FX: Online dictionaries: 7
- FX: Online language columns: 3
- FX: Online usage guides: 4
- FX: Preposition at end: 1
- FX: Provenance of English vocabulary: 1
- FX: Radio alphabets: 1
- FX: Related newsgroups: 3
- FX: Spaces between sentences: 1
- FX: Spelling reform: 2
- FX: Split infinitive: 3
- FX: Subjunctive: 3
- FX: Trademarks: 1
- FX: What is "ghoti"?: 1
- FX: What is a suggested format for citing online sources?: 1
- FX: When to use "the": 1
- FX: Where to put apostrophes in possessive forms: 7
- FX: Words ending in "-gry": 2
- FX: Words pronounced differently according to context: 2
- FX: Words whose spelling has influenced their pronunciation: 2
- FX: Words without vowels: 2
- FX: [Prefatory remarks]: 3
- Fast FAQ:
[Prefatory remarks]
: 1
- Fast FAQ: AUE's fast-access FAQ: 1
- Garbl: has no: 1
- Genitive: AUE: Genitive is Not Always Possessive: 3
- Home: The alt.usage.english Home Page: 2
- I before E:
Examples of exceptions to the rule:
: 1
- I before E:
Exceptions with "ei" or "ie" pronounced as in "species" or "seize":
: 1
- I before E: AUE: Exceptions to the rule 'I before E except after C': 1
- IPA II:
'
: 1
- IPA II:
,
: 1
- IPA II:
Credits:
: 1
- IPA II:
Some U.S. speakers do not distinguish between "Mary",
: 1
- IPA II:
The sounds in the column headed 'IPA sounds' have been copied with permission
: 1
- IPA II: A Quick Look:
: 1
- IPA II: Slashes or square brackets?
: 1
- IPA II: The symbol /A./ has been included only because at least one AUE contributor has
: 2
- IPA I:
Writing ASCII IPA
: 1
- IPA I:
Slashes or square brackets?
: 1
- IPA I:
'
: 1
- IPA I:
,
: 1
- IPA I:
Credits
: 1
- IPA I:
'
: 1
- IPA I:
,
: 1
- IPA I:
<+>
: 1
- IPA I:
About the sound files
: 1
- IPA I:
Speakers
: 2
- IPA I:
About this document
: 1
- IPA I:
Among those who use the same vowel in 'Mary', 'merry', and 'marry', not all of
: 1
- IPA I:
Credits
: 1
- IPA I:
Preliminary remarks
: 1
- IPA I:
Slashes or square brackets?
: 1
- IPA I:
The sounds in the column headed 'IPA sounds' have been copied with permission
: 1
- IPA I:
Writing ASCII IPA
: 1
- IPA I: A Quick Look:
: 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.
: 1
- IPA I: There is no ASCII IPA symbol for the IPA 180-degree-rotated
: 1
- Interlinear IPA: AUE: Interlinear transliterations of ASCII IPA: 2
- Intro A:
Dealing with unwanted postings
: 1
- Intro B:
Encyclopedias & Search Engines
: 1
- Intro B:
Sites on words and language
: 1
- Intro B:
Where to find previous postings
: 1
- Intro B:
Word lists
: 2
- Intro C:
"cold enough to freeze the balls off a brass monkey"
: 1
- Intro C:
"full monty"
: 1
- Intro C:
"obaue" or "ObAUE"
: 1
- Intro C:
"push the envelope"
: 2
- Intro C:
American
: 1
- Intro D:
Gender-neutral pronouns: "he/she" -v- "they"
: 3
- Intro D:
Names for &, @, and #
: 1
- Intro E:
I before E except after C
: 4
- Intro E:
Joke about step-by-step spelling reform
: 1
- Intro F: AUE Intro F: Contents of AUE FAQ and FAQ Supplement: 2
- Intro G: AUE Intro G: Where is the FAQ?: 5
- Isles:
GREAT BRITAIN. Used by cartographers to denote the biggest
: 1
- Lawler: The canonical paraphrase for will is be going to, idiosyncratically: 3
- Lawler: There is also another opposition among the formal auxiliaries, between: 2
- Lawler: >> For instance: English has only one phoneme, but it has: 3
- Lawler: >> That is, the voicing assimilation that makes these morphemes voiceless: 2
- Lawler: >If, say, a parenthesis is marked off by commas, is that phonological: 1
- Lawler: >Just one question: Where does the past perfect ("have gone", "have sung"): 3
- Lawler: >Past tenses:: 8
- Lawler: Beth Levin is a computational linguist at Northwestern University: 2
- Lawler: I can't say _____ really means I can't say ___ in a word. When I go: 4
- Lawler: Since you ask, here's a moderately complete list of polarity items,: 1
- Lawler: That is, the voicing assimilation that makes these morphemes voiceless: 1
- Lawler: You may have noticed the Sapir quotation in my .sig.: 1
- Lawler: "Correctness": 1
- Lawler: "It" in "It's raining": 7
- Lawler: "amn't": 1
- Lawler: "vehicle": 1
- Lawler: Alumin(i)um: 4
- Lawler: As far as ... goes/is concerned: 2
- Lawler: Bring vs Take: 1
- Lawler: Can't Help (But) ...: 3
- Lawler: Canadian and American Raising: 1
- Lawler: Commas again: 1
- Lawler: Commas: 3
- Lawler: English Language History, with excursus on Technology: 3
- Lawler: English Modals: 1
- Lawler: English and Infinity: 1
- Lawler: Extraposition, plus Selected Short Subjects: 2
- Lawler: Give a Damn: 5
- Lawler: Gotten vs. Got: 5
- Lawler: Hafta and Other Modal Paraphrases: 2
- Lawler: He, she, they?: 2
- Lawler: Headline grammar: 1
- Lawler: Henry Lee Smith: 2
- Lawler: Hyphens: 2
- Lawler: Indian English: 1
- Lawler: Literacy: 7
- Lawler: Negative Polarity Items: 5
- Lawler: News Item: 1
- Lawler: Object Complements: 2
- Lawler: Phrasal Verbs: 4
- Lawler: Quantifier-Negative Semantics: 6
- Lawler: Reams: 10
- Lawler: Ross Constraints: 2
- Lawler: Schwa and Central Vowels: 3
- Lawler: So Much For Spelling Reform: 3
- Lawler: There are also two kinds of relative clauses:: 1
- Lawler: Usage of "the hell": 3
- Lawler: Verbing Nouns: 1
- Lawler: anymore: 1
- Lawler: gonna: 2
- Lawler: zilch: 1
- Links: Collections of Web links
: 2
- Links: Dictionaries
: 1
- Links: Fun with words
: 1
- Links: Learning English
: 1
- Links: Miscellaneous, not language related
: 1
- Links: Words about words
: 2
- RH WotD: worm has turned: 1
- Subjunctive?: AUE: Does English Have a Subjunctive Mood?: 1
- UCLE02: The history of ucle: 1
- UCLE03: Judith
: 1
- UCLE03: Lindsay
: 2
- UCLE05: John Davies's commentary
: 1
- UCLE06: Rhetorical vocabulary: 1
- UCLE08: Britannia: Her history,
: 4
- UCLE08: Mother Goose
: 1
- UCLE08: The “Fat Lady”
: 1
- UCLE09: “Bloody”
: 1
- UCLE09: “It went pear-shaped”
: 2
- UCLE09: “It’s
: 1
- UCLE09: Anorak
: 4
- UCLE09: Holidays
: 3
- UCLE09: Rivers
: 2
- UCLE11: The
: 4
- UCLE12: News
: 4
- UCLE13: "On the fritz"
: 1
- UCLE13: The Curse of Macbeth
: 1
- UCLE13: The Ides of March
: 1
- UCLE13: Waterloo
: 3
- UCLE14: Cripplegate and Crutched
: 1
- UCLE14: Eponymous London Shopkeepers
: 1
- UCLE14: Literary characters who became
: 1
- UCLE15:
The Tooth Fairy
: 3
- UCLE15: Round-Robin and
: 1
- UCLE16: Hooligan
: 1
- What's new?:
6 December 2001
: 2
- What's new?:
15 February 2002
: 1
- What's new?:
16 May 2002
: 1
- What's new?:
2 September 2001:
: 5
- What's new?:
24 April 2002
: 2
- What's new?:
3 September 2001:
: 1
- What's new?:
4 Jun 2002
: 2
- What's new?:
5 March 2002
: 3
- Where FAQ?:
Berna Slikker's version (19 February 1996):
: 1
- Where FAQ?:
Brian Tung's version (15 August 1995):
: 2
- Where FAQ?:
Partial hypertext FAQ:
: 1
- Where FAQ?: Fast-access FAQ:
: 1
- Where FAQ?: Peter Moylan's version (12 March 1995):
: 1
- Where FAQ?: Single-page FAQ with internal links:
: 1
- Where FAQ?: Version with links to Amazon (2 October 1996):
: 1
- Yaelf: (WD) My new puppy has really gotten my goat, and I was wondering how the heck that phrase came to be?: 1
- Yaelf: Has Grammar Lost Its Technological Edge?: 1
- Yaelf: Is English the only language that has spelling bees?: 1
- Yaelf: Yourdictionary.com has a quick lookup, word of the day (English and Spanish), articles, and essays on English topics. It's great!: 1
-
AUE people
: 1
- 10. The United Kingdom and Colonies
: 2
- 11. The Commonwealth
: 2
- 4. The United Kingdom
: 1
- 7. The Common Travel Area
: 2
- 9. The European Union
: 1
- AUE Gallery: Padraig Breathnach: 1
- AUE: "Pear-shaped", supplementary comments: 1
- AUE: "SOS": 1
- AUE: About Autism and Daniel McGrath: 2
- AUE: About the alt.usage.english newsgroup: 2
- AUE: Additional comments about deja.com: 1
- AUE: Announcement of creation of uk.culture.language.english: 1
- AUE: Books About Words: 1
- AUE: Comments on a Proposal for Reformed English Spelling: 12
- AUE: Differing opinion about Tyburn River: 1
- AUE: Does Mark Barratt's recording of "catamaran" have a plosive "t"?: 2
- AUE: Grammar Books: 1
- AUE: Is 'people' the plural of 'person'?: 1
- AUE: London Boink, December 2001: 1
- AUE: London Millennium Boink, December 1999: 1
- AUE: London Symposium Boink, September 1998: 1
- AUE: Perlfect Search: 1
- AUE: Search Information: 2
- AUE: Summer Boink, London, June 1999: 2
- AUE: What is prescriptivism?: 1
- AUE: What is the UK? Is it the same as Britain, Great Britain or England?: 3
- AUE: Worldwide Distribution of English Speakers: 1
- Cambodunum
: 11
- Fieldfares
: 2
- Preface
: 11
- Suggestions: How To Form Your Reply
: 2
- The Poetry of F. W. Moorman: 3
:Hasegawa :hash :hask :hasn't
- Lawler: >Your example of English and Caxton print shop goes a long way to convince: 1
- Lawler: "equally" and comparatives: 1
- Lawler: "only": 1
- Lawler: Gotten vs. Got: 1
- Lawler: Negative Polarity Items: 2
:Hasp :hast :haste :hasten
- Lawler: Quantifier-Negative Semantics: 1
:hat :hatband :hatch :hatched :hatchet :hate :Hated :hater :hath :Hatpin
- Cunningham: Individual poster histories - alt.usage.english: 1
:hatter :Hatunen :hatzlacha :haud :hauf :haughty :haulm :Haunbuik :haute :have
- AUE Logo: AUE: The Totally Official Logo: 3
- AWWY: Something to Crow About; bone to pick or crow to pluck?; crow about; crow flies, as the; crow's nest; eating crow; feet, crow's; flies, as the crow; nest, crow's; pluck with you, have a crow: 1
- AWWY: The Walls have ears...Mum...Sub Rosa; auriculaires (walls have ears); Dionysius and walls with ears; ears in walls; The Walls Have Ears...Mum...Sub Rosa; Medici, Catherine de (auriculaires); mum, Shakespearean origins of; sealed lips (mum); sub rosa: 3
- AWWY: alias; alibi; arm of the law, long; Laying Down the Law; Big Cheeses and Muck-a-Mucks; cheeses, the big; culprit; fromage, le grand (big cheese); grand fromage (big cheese); ignoramus; kings have long arms (long arm of the law); law, laying down the; statutes and statutory: 1
- Abbreviations:
Unedited list of search results
: 5
- Abbreviations: AUE: Initialisms Commonly Used in alt.usage.english: 1
- Audio:
Other Sound Files
: 2
- Audio:
Technical information
: 1
- Audio: AUE: The Audio Archive: 1
- Brians: "You've got mail" should be "you have mail.": 1
- Cunningham: Comments: 1
- Cunningham: Explanatory Remarks: 4
- Cunningham: Multiple IDs: : 4
- Emphasis quotes: AUE: Use of Quotation Marks for Emphasis: 1
- FX: "-er" vs "-re": 1
- FX: "-ize" vs "-ise": 1
- FX: "A, B and C" vs "A, B, and C": 1
- FX: "Bob's your uncle": 1
- FX: "Caesarean section": 3
- FX: "Eskimo": 1
- FX: "Illegitimis non carborundum": 1
- FX: "It needs cleaned": 1
- FX: "It's me" vs "It is I": 4
- FX: "Jingle Bells": 4
- FX: "Let them eat cake!": 2
- FX: "O.K.": 1
- FX: "SOS": 1
- FX: "The exception proves the rule.": 5
- FX: "You have another think coming": 5
- FX: "acronym": 1
- FX: "all ... not": 2
- FX: "alumin(i)um": 2
- FX: "beg the question": 2
- FX: "between you and I": 2
- FX: "billion": a U.K. view: 1
- FX: "bloody": 1
- FX: "blue moon": 2
- FX: "by hook or by crook": 1
- FX: "canola": 2
- FX: "catch-22": 6
- FX: "copacetic": 1
- FX: "could care less": 2
- FX: "could of": 3
- FX: "crap": 1
- FX: "different to", "different than": 1
- FX: "done"="finished": 15
- FX: "due to": 1
- FX: "eighty-six"="nix": 1
- FX: "face the music": 1
- FX: "fall off a turnip truck": 1
- FX: "flammable": 2
- FX: "freeway": 1
- FX: "fuck": 2
- FX: "functionality": 2
- FX: "hoist with his own petard": 1
- FX: "hooker": 1
- FX: "hopefully", "thankfully": 5
- FX: "impact"="to affect": 2
- FX: "in like Flynn": 1
- FX: "jerry-built"/"jury-rigged": 2
- FX: "kangaroo": 1
- FX: "less" vs "fewer": 1
- FX: "like" vs "as": 1
- FX: "like" vs "such as": 1
- FX: "love"="zero": 1
- FX: "more than you can shake a stick at": 4
- FX: "none is" vs "none are": 1
- FX: "pie-shaped": 2
- FX: "politically correct": 1
- FX: "posh": 4
- FX: "put in one's two cents' worth": 1
- FX: "quality": 4
- FX: "sirloin"/"baron of beef": 2
- FX: "spit and image"/"spitting image": 1
- FX: "spoonerism": 4
- FX: "suck"="be very unsatisfying": 1
- FX: "that" vs "which": 1
- FX: "the whole nine yards": 1
- FX: "tip": 1
- FX: "true fact": 1
- FX: "whole cloth": 6
- FX: "wonk": 1
- FX: "you saying" vs "your saying": 2
- FX: Biblical sense of "to know": 2
- FX: Books on Britishisms, Canadianisms, etc.: 1
- FX: Books on phrase origins: 1
- FX: Books on usage: 1
- FX: Commonest words: 1
- FX: Dictionaries: 3
- FX: Do publishers put false info in dictionaries to catch plagiarists?: 1
- FX: Does the next millennium begin in 2000 or 2001?: 1
- FX: FOREIGNERS' FAQS: 2
- FX: Gender-neutral pronouns: 2
- FX: Guidelines for posting: 2
- FX: How did "Truly" become a personal name?: 1
- FX: How reliable are dictionaries?: 3
- FX: How to represent pronunciation in ASCII: 2
- FX: I before E except after C: 1
- FX: Online dictionaries: 1
- FX: Origin of the dollar sign: 4
- FX: Plurals of Latin/Greek words: 3
- FX: Preposition at end: 2
- FX: Related newsgroups: 2
- FX: Spaces between sentences: 2
- FX: Split infinitive: 6
- FX: Subjunctive: 2
- FX: Typo: 1
- FX: What do you call the grass strip between the road and the sidewalk?: 1
- FX: What is "ghoti"?: 1
- FX: What will we call the next decade?: 1
- FX: What words are their own antonym?: 1
- FX: When to use "the": 1
- FX: Where to put apostrophes in possessive forms: 1
- FX: Words ending in "-gry": 2
- FX: Words pronounced differently according to context: 3
- FX: Words whose spelling has influenced their pronunciation: 1
- FX: Words without vowels: 1
- FX: [Prefatory remarks]: 3
- Fast FAQ:
[Prefatory remarks]
: 1
- Fast FAQ: AUE's fast-access FAQ: 1
- Garbl: have an effect on: 1
- Genitive: AUE: Genitive is Not Always Possessive: 2
- Groups: AUE: "company is" and "company are": 1
- Home: The alt.usage.english Home Page: 1
- I before E:
Examples of exceptions to the rule:
: 2
- I before E:
Exceptions with "ei" or "ie" pronounced as in "species" or "seize":
: 1
- I before E:
Extensions to the rule that have been suggested:
: 5
- I before E: AUE: Exceptions to the rule 'I before E except after C': 2
- IPA II:
About this document:
: 2
- IPA II:
Some U.S. speakers do not distinguish between "Mary",
: 1
- IPA II:
The Details:
: 1
- IPA II:
The [O] sound requires rounded lips, but lips making a
: 2
- IPA II:
The sounds in the column headed 'IPA sounds' have been copied with permission
: 1
- IPA II: A Quick Look:
: 1
- IPA II: ASCII IPA: a way to represent speech using a computer keyboard (American only): 3
- IPA II: Slashes or square brackets?
: 1
- IPA II: The reference to 'Chicago pop' first appeared in Mark Israel's
: 3
- IPA I:
Writing ASCII IPA
: 1
- IPA I:
Help to complete this page!
: 3
- IPA I:
Slashes or square brackets?
: 1
- IPA I:
Consonants and vowels
: 3
- IPA I:
Reading ASCII IPA
: 1
- IPA I:
Among those who use the same vowel in 'Mary', 'merry', and 'marry', not all of
: 1
- IPA I:
Consonants and vowels
: 3
- IPA I:
Help me complete this Web page!
: 4
- IPA I:
Reading ASCII IPA
: 1
- IPA I:
Slashes or square brackets?
: 1
- IPA I:
The remarks concerning the pronunciation of [O] were taken verbatim from Mark Israel's
: 2
- IPA I:
The sounds in the column headed 'IPA sounds' have been copied with permission
: 1
- IPA I:
Writing ASCII IPA
: 1
- IPA I: A Quick Look:
: 1
- IPA I: AUE: ASCII IPA in a nutshell: 2
- 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
: 3
- 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.
: 1
- IPA I: The reference to 'Chicago pop' first appeared in Mark Israel's
: 3
- Intro A:
Dictionary Definitions
: 2
- Intro A:
Guidelines for posting
: 2
- Intro A:
Responding
: 1
- Intro B:
Historical English, and English Literature
: 1
- Intro B:
Word lists
: 1
- Intro C:
"billion"
: 2
- Intro C:
"cold enough to freeze the balls off a brass monkey"
: 1
- Intro C:
"obaue" or "ObAUE"
: 1
- Intro C:
American
: 2
- Intro D:
"A" or "an"
: 1
- Intro D:
"If I was" -v- "If I were"
: 1
- Intro D:
Acronyms and other abbreviations using initial letters
: 1
- Intro E:
What is "ghoti"?
: 1
- Intro F: AUE Intro F: Contents of AUE FAQ and FAQ Supplement: 2
- Intro G: AUE Intro G: Where is the FAQ?: 1
- Isles:
CHANNEL ISLANDS, ISLE OF MAN. Note that the Isle of Man
: 2
- Isles: AUE: (heading): 1
- Lawler: As to this discussion, the usual oppositions are those between: 2
- Lawler: The canonical paraphrase for will is be going to, idiosyncratically: 15
- Lawler: There is also another opposition among the formal auxiliaries, between: 4
- Lawler: --- Followup --: 1
- Lawler: >> That is, the voicing assimilation that makes these morphemes voiceless: 5
- Lawler: >>> The facts of the matter are these:: 2
- Lawler: >Just one question: Where does the past perfect ("have gone", "have sung"): 6
- Lawler: >Past tenses:: 16
- Lawler: I can't say _____ really means I can't say ___ in a word. When I go: 16
- Lawler: I suspect much of the rancor that greets spellings of had've is: 3
- Lawler: The intonation curve is (roughly) up-down-back.up, graphically something: 4
- Lawler: Where I grew up (in DeKalb, IL, 100 km W of Chicago) Mary,: 2
- Lawler: You may have noticed the Sapir quotation in my .sig.: 3
- Lawler: "Correctness": 2
- Lawler: "It" in "It's raining": 7
- Lawler: "Quote, Unquote": 2
- Lawler: "amn't": 6
- Lawler: "equally" and comparatives: 1
- Lawler: "only": 6
- Lawler: "vehicle": 1
- Lawler: A or An Historical Novel?: 1
- Lawler: Alumin(i)um: 4
- Lawler: Books on English, Language, and Linguistics: 2
- Lawler: Bring vs Take: 1
- Lawler: Can't Help (But) ...: 5
- Lawler: Canadian and American Raising: 2
- Lawler: Commas again: 1
- Lawler: English L sounds: 1
- Lawler: English Language History, with excursus on Technology: 8
- Lawler: English Modals: 4
- Lawler: English and Infinity: 4
- Lawler: Extraposition, plus Selected Short Subjects: 4
- Lawler: Give a Damn: 5
- Lawler: Gotten vs. Got: 16
- Lawler: Hafta and Other Modal Paraphrases: 17
- Lawler: He, she, they?: 3
- Lawler: Henry Lee Smith: 4
- Lawler: Hyphens: 3
- Lawler: Indian English: 9
- Lawler: Literacy: 2
- Lawler: Negative Polarity Items: 3
- Lawler: News Item: 5
- Lawler: Object Complements: 5
- Lawler: Phrasal Verbs: 1
- Lawler: Phrasal Verbs: 4
- Lawler: Quantifier-Negative Semantics: 13
- Lawler: Reams: 5
- Lawler: Ross Constraints: 5
- Lawler: Schwa and Central Vowels: 1
- Lawler: So Much For Spelling Reform: 2
- Lawler: Tense and related topics: 8
- Lawler: That vs. Which: 3
- Lawler: There are also two kinds of relative clauses:: 3
- Lawler: Toward(s) and Beside(s): 3
- Lawler: Two kinds of "that-clauses": 1
- Lawler: Usage of "the hell": 3
- Lawler: Verbing Nouns: 1
- Lawler: Vowels Before R: 3
- Lawler: Who(m): 1
- Lawler: anymore: 2
- Lawler: gonna: 14
- Lawler: hadn't've: 3
- Lawler: striddly: 1
- Lawler: zilch: 2
- Links: Collections of Web links
: 2
- Links: Discussion groups, Usenet group Websites
: 1
- Links: Fun with words
: 1
- Links: Notes
: 3
- Links: Online services
: 1
- Quinion: Have one's guts for garters: 1
- Quinion: They Have a Word for It (book review): 1
- Quinion: Work cut out: 1
- RH WotD: got vs. have: 1
- RH WotD: have: 1
- Subjunctive?: AUE: Does English Have a Subjunctive Mood?: 4
- Supp: AUE FAQ Supplement: 1
- UCLE02: The history of ucle: 2
- UCLE03: Judith
: 1
- UCLE03: Lindsay
: 3
- UCLE05: John Davies's commentary
: 4
- UCLE05: What’s
: 2
- UCLE07: Some significant numbers from literature and literary criticism: 2
- UCLE08: Britannia: Her history,
: 2
- UCLE09: “Bloody”
: 1
- UCLE09: “It went pear-shaped”
: 2
- UCLE09: “It’s
: 1
- UCLE09: “Pop
: 4
- UCLE09: Daring
: 2
- UCLE09: Food
: 1
- UCLE09: Rivers
: 2
- UCLE11: The
: 5
- UCLE12: News
: 6
- UCLE13: Calamity Jane
: 4
- UCLE13: Waterloo
: 5
- UCLE14: Cripplegate and Crutched
: 3
- UCLE14: Eponymous London Shopkeepers
: 1
- UCLE15:
The Tooth Fairy
: 2
- UCLE15: Bonfire
: 2
- UCLE15: Scuttlebutt, Grapevine,
: 1
- Usenet Docs: AUE: Links to Official Usenet Documents: 1
- What's new?:
6 December 2001
: 1
- What's new?:
10 March 2002
: 1
- What's new?:
16 May 2002
: 1
- What's new?:
2 September 2001:
: 4
- What's new?:
30 December 2001
: 1
- What's new?:
5 March 2002
: 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: 3
- 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: Book Review, They Have a Word for It: 1
- Yaelf: Interstellar Travelers Will Have to Watch Their Language: 1
- Yaelf: Malaprops I have known: 1
- Yaelf: People commonly ask empty rhetorical questions that rarely receive any sort of sensible answer. When you have had your surfeit of poetical whimsy and are ready for some good, hard facts, come here to be set straight.: 1
- Yaelf: What is the origin of "Dibs"? "Dibbies"? To have "Dibs on"?: 1
- e-mail vs email: AUE: Preferences, "e-mail" vs "email": 1
- 1. England
: 1
- 11. The Commonwealth
: 2
- 2. England and Wales
: 2
- 3. Great Britain
: 1
- 5. The United Kingdom and Islands
: 2
- 9. The European Union
: 1
- AUE Gallery: Padraig Breathnach: 5
- AUE Gallery: Stephen Toogood: 1
- AUE: "Pear-shaped", supplementary comments: 3
- AUE: "anymore" and "any more": 1
- AUE: "miss not having": 1
- AUE: About Autism and Daniel McGrath: 1
- AUE: Additional comments about deja.com: 2
- AUE: Analysis of Some Mark Barratt Vowels: 1
- AUE: Arthur the Rat: 1
- AUE: Audio recording technique - some suggestions: 10
- AUE: Comments on a Proposal for Reformed English Spelling: 6
- AUE: Dictionaries: 2
- AUE: Does Mark Barratt's recording of "catamaran" have a plosive "t"?: 2
- AUE: Georgia speaker comments: 4
- AUE: Grammar Books: 1
- AUE: London Millennium Boink, December 1999: 2
- AUE: London Symposium Boink, September 1998: 1
- AUE: Summer Boink, London, June 1999: 2
- AUE: The Rainbow Passage: 5
- AUE: Thou, Thee, and Archaic Grammar: 1
- AUE: Totally Officially Unknown People: 1
- AUE: What is the UK? Is it the same as Britain, Great Britain or England?: 3
- Cambodunum
: 19
- Credits
: 2
- Explanatory notes:
: 1
- Fieldfares
: 3
- Improvements
: 1
- Preface
: 19
- Suggestions: How To Form Your Reply
: 3
- The AUE Photo Gallery: 1
- The Aim Of This Document
: 2
- The Poetry of F. W. Moorman: 2
- Why Bother Following This Style?
: 1
:haven :haven't :Haverah :Haversham's :having :havoc :havver-bread :haw :hawed :hawev
- Lawler: Henry Lee Smith: 1
:hawk :hay :Hay-cart :hay-time :hayed :Hayes
- Cunningham: Individual poster histories - alt.usage.english: 2
:Hays :hayseed :hayseeds :Hayter :haywire :Hazards :Hazel :Hazlitt :hbk :Hbo :Hce :Hcf :Hdtv :Hdyd
[Go to the Concordance Main Index]
|
|