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Voice of San Diego is pleased to publish the 2020 edition of A Parent’s Guide to Public Schools. The guide was created to provide a tool for families to use when making decisions about a child’s ...
The essentials of Public Affairs Reporting by Hassan Biodun Suleiman, PhD and Mukaila Olabamiji Sanusi, is an insightful guide aimed at equipping journalists with necessary skills and knowledge to ...
TEScO (it's a supermarket in the UK) Gavinwillfixit ( leader of the blues Gavin the great like to spawn lock teams so someone breached rayles but before turning the flags demolished the whole keep)
MSN: Tesco Ireland ordered to pay €6,000 to blind paralympian refused entry to three stores with her guide dog
The Irish arm of supermarket giant Tesco has been ordered to pay €6,000 compensation to blind Paralympian Nadine Lattimore after she and her guide dog, Pilot, were initially refused entry to three ...
Tesco Ireland ordered to pay €6,000 to blind paralympian refused entry to three stores with her guide dog
MSN: Tesco ordered to pay €6k to former Paralympian for not allowing guide dog into stores
Tesco ordered to pay €6k to former Paralympian for not allowing guide dog into stores
In America growing up in the Midwest, I've always heard people pronounce the word "bury" as if it were pronounced sounding the same as the word "berry". Ever since I've noticed this many years ba...
1 How did the phrase "bury one's head in the sand" meaning "to ignore a bad situation hoping it will disappear" (coming from the misbelief that ostriches do this to hide from predators) end up being part of English? At what time did the idiom and perhaps stereotype enter general knowledge among English speakers?
Does “burrow nose-deep” literally mean “dig in / bury deeply,” or have other figurative meanings like intimacy? To me “burrow nose-deep” in episodes of Emily Dickinson and Obama’s replacement of staff appear to be used in different meaning? Is it an idiom or simple combination of “burrow” and "nose deep.”?
In the UK it is called chasing: When running cables or pipes up (or along) a masonry wall, the neatest method is to bury (or, in builders terms, chase) them in the wall surface. (From a DIY site) Although this meaning doesn't appear in dictionaries I have checked, it probably derives from: chase2: Engrave (metal, or a design on metal) Edit: Just noticed that Merriam-Webster has this definition ...
What is the name of the tactic that politicians use to bury people with ...
It looks like the modern pronunciation of bury comes from dialects like Kentish, while the spelling comes from dialects like those in the West Midlands. Build, buy, busy, and bury all have a "b" before the vowel: this is the "labial consonant" mentioned by the OED.
The spelling of busy (and bury) is the result of dialect mixture. Different Middle English varieties had different outcomes of Old English short /y/. In the East Midlands variety that underlies the standard, it became short /u/ as in blush; in Kent, short /ɛ/ as in merry (for people who pronounce it with the same vowel as in met, anyhow); in the West Midlands, short /i/ as in bridge: all ...
Neither, East Germany (official name Deutsche Demokratishe Republik, German Democratic Republic) had borders with West Germany, Poland and Czechoslovakia.