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ette查看 ette 在百度字典中的解释百度英翻中〔查看〕
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ette查看 ette 在Yahoo字典中的解释Yahoo英翻中〔查看〕





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  • Is the suffix -ette used for referring to a female?
    The -ette suffix is normally applied to women, not objects designed specifically for women Thus suffragette , your dudette , usherette and the like The French language uses -ette to feminise names: Paul Paulette, Claude Claudette, etc , and the same principle is used to feminise some nouns in English to create a female variant
  • suffixes - Is there a Male suffix equivalent to -et -ette? - English . . .
    It appears that in the native french the masculine is -et and the feminine is -ette Both meaning a smaller form of something else, for example a Cigarette is a smaller cigar At some point English seemed to pick it up as a term meaning a feminine version of something else as well
  • formality - Posting a letter and sending it via e-mail - English . . .
    I am sending a formal letter to a recipient by registered post and e-mail Is it convention to include within the e-mail PDF such text like: "As sent via post on " or something similar to inform the
  • Changes in English names of people
    @Cyril John Lennon probably wouldn't answer to Jack My name is John, and I wouldn't answer to Jack But, it wouldn't be unusual for people to begin calling a John "Jack" early in their life, and then it would stick
  • Origin of fag (meaning a cigarette in British English)
    According to the Online Etymology Dictionary, it comes from "fag", meaning a loose piece of cloth: fag (n 1) Look up fag at Dictionary com British slang for "cigarette" (originally, especially, the butt of a smoked cigarette), 1888, probably from fag "loose piece, last remnant of cloth" (late 14c , as in fag-end "extreme end, loose piece," 1610s), which perhaps is related to fag (v ), which
  • When did it become fashionable to drop ts in certain words?
    Sometime in the 1500s "How to Pronounce 'Often'" There’s a \t\ in often, but how often do you hear it? As you might guess, the \t\ was pronounced in the past, when the word began as a variant of oft (also spelled ofte in Middle English), which was the more common form until the 1500s
  • What rules of English allow the first t in “patient” to make an sh sound?
    The reason something pronounced [ʃ] ("sh") would ever get the spelling "ti" is because of palatalization
  • What happened to the “‑est” and “‑eth” verb suffixes in English?
    To expand on this, morphological leveling isn't a random phenomenon It can be difficult to track the precise reasons for a specific change, but we can conjecture that it might be similar to issues like verb agreement in Modern English ("they you is")
  • Origin of That tracks to mean That makes sense.
    For the past few years, I have been hearing people say "that tracks," meaning "that makes sense " My search on Green's Dictionary of Slang yielded nothing with this clear meaning, but I've found a lot of example usages by searching Google for terms like "that tracks because" or "which tracks because":
  • word choice - Approach to or approach for - English Language . . .
    approach to NOUN When used as a verb, 'approach' takes no preposition However, when as a noun, it requires a preposition, otherwise you end up with two nouns in a row: "The pilot's approach [ ] the runway was too low "





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