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Englishman    音标拼音: ['ɪŋglɪʃmən]


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  • Englishman or English man? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Both "English man" and "Englishman" can be correct, but they mean (slightly) different things, and the latter is vastly more common If you're speaking of a man from England (as opposed to a man from a different place), then the word you want is Englishman If you're using English as an adjective, i e you've already established who this man is and you're adding additional description, then
  • Englishman and British man - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Why is it Englishman, Frenchman, etc (one word) but British man (two words)?
  • Origin of the term Pom - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Every Englishman who turned up at the end of the 19th century, when the term came into use, had with him a dog of small breed called a Pomeranian, pom-pom or toy-pom I can find no reference to this as being the origin of the term 'Pom' Has anybody read of a theory like this?
  • What does the phrase Fee-fi-fo-fum actually mean?
    Ettins (Etyn, jotun, etc) where monsterous giants who were well known (in the mythology) to use galdr magic (vocally sung magic chants) The Fehu Galdr in four parts, such as "Fee Fi Fo Fum", is used for finding what is being searched for As the poem indicates, the ettin was searching for the "Englishman" and using this chant to aid in the search
  • what are the origins of hi, hey, hello? - English Language Usage . . .
    Hello, formerly an Americanism, is now nearly as common as hullo in Britain (Say who you are; do not just say 'hello' is the warning given in our telephone directories) and the Englishman cannot be expected to give up the right to say hello if he likes it better than his native hullo [H W Fowler, "A Dictionary of Modern English Usage," 1926]
  • Whats the difference between Englander and English?
    The two options would be "John is an Englander" or "John is English" As @Max Williams says the first option is not used nowadays, despite being in the dictionary However it is used for other locations, eg "Cathy's a die-hard New Yorker" This is common and acceptable Of course the difference here may be due to referring to a city or region versus a nationality As a side note, from a
  • Why can we say an American but not a British?
    We need to say a Briton (or a Brit, as noted by Erik), an Englishman or an Englishwoman and a Welshman or a Welshwoman There are other instances when the adjective form and the noun form are identical: you have already noted American and German Other examples are Italian, African, Israeli, Indonesian, Pakistani, Indian and Brazilian
  • What is the difference between English and British?
    The crucial distinction is someone who wants to be identified with the culture, music, traditions, etc, of their nation (a Scotsman, Englishman, Welshwoman, Cornishwoman, etc); and someone who wishes to emphasize the unity of the whole state and its political institutions (and maybe they believe that the cultural distinctions are minor), they
  • An Englishman has to be quiet when an Irishman talks
    The expression "an Englishman has to be quiet when an Irishman talks" has no origin or history It seems that it is Mr Donohue's neologism, probably coined at that moment to rebuke Christopher Hitchens
  • Whence comes the expression ‘’starve a cold, feed a fever?”
    On the other hand, from " Extract from the Diary of a Good Protestant," in The Oeconomist, or, Englishman's Magazine (February 1799): Tuesday —Caught a violent catarrh at church: determined to feed well at dinner Sydenham, I think, says in his chapter on gout, " Starve a fever, but stuff a cold " Rather better towards four o'clock





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