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It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
I'm putting it down to an aberration which I think we'll disregard ...
For some reason, I don't like the much-used here 'spot on' which is a quid pro quo for the 'absolutely' suggestion which I do tend to use. However, I've been muttering it to myself, sort of role-playing, and think I usually say, Yes, absolutely; or Absolutely, yes. But 'spot on' ...
Retail therapy
Must have
Shop till you drop
Take the waiting out of wanting
It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
I think 'some' - as in "some 2,300 avoidance schemes were disclosed" - is not the same as 'approximately' or 'about'; I think it means exactly 2,300 etc.
I think 'some' - as in "some 2,300 avoidance schemes were disclosed" - is not the same as 'approximately' or 'about'; I think it means exactly 2,300 etc.
or even "almost exactly"
which is a bit like the Christmas dilemma
It's either a "Royal David's City" or a "little town" it can't be BOTH
I think 'some' - as in "some 2,300 avoidance schemes were disclosed" - is not the same as 'approximately' or 'about'; I think it means exactly 2,300 etc.
Yes, I see what you mean. I'd not considered that before. I think there is a sense of 'at least' about it, too, so it's not quite exact, but it's much stronger than 'about'.
I think 'some' - as in "some 2,300 avoidance schemes were disclosed" - is not the same as 'approximately' or 'about'; I think it means exactly 2,300 etc.
"Some - used with numbers to indicate an approximate amount or estimate, and passing into an adverb with the sense of 'about, nearly, approximately'. "
c 888 King Ælfred 'Tha wæron hi sume ten year on tham gewinne' ; c 900 Old English Chronicle 'Thær wurdon ... sume feower cyninges thegnas ofslægene' ; 1567 Maplet ' The floud Ganges hath eles some 30 Foote long' ; 1668 Dryden 'I have some three hundred pistoles by me' ; 1787 Burns 'It's now some nine-an'-twenty year'; 1865 Ruskin 'This collection would probably have been some thousand or twelve hundred pounds.'
Wouldn't reNUMeration make more sense, since it's about money and numbers?
Which is, IIRC, from the same root as "remuneration": "money" is involved, not "nomey".
I've just discovered my own particular bugbear: "Tympani" instead of "Timpani": nothing wrong or illogical about the former, just a residue of my percussion lessons ("No letter 'y' in Italian!" I was firmly told. A lovely chap and excellent teacher otherwise, I've adopted his prejudice in his memory!)
[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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