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  • grammaticality - Is the phrase for free correct? - English Language . . .
    A friend claims that the phrase for free is incorrect Should we only say at no cost instead?
  • Free of vs. Free from - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    If so, my analysis amounts to a rule in search of actual usage—a prescription rather than a description In any event, the impressive rise of "free of" against "free from" over the past 100 years suggests that the English-speaking world has become more receptive to using "free of" in place of "free from" during that period
  • What is the opposite of free as in free of charge?
    What is the opposite of free as in "free of charge" (when we speak about prices)? We can add not for negation, but I am looking for a single word
  • What is the difference between free rider and free loader?
    Free ride dates back to 1880, while free loader is a more recent construction “freeloader (n ) also free-loader, by 1939, from free (adj ) + agent noun from load (v )As a verb, freeload is attested by 1967 and probably is a back-formation from this”
  • word choice - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Items given away free, typically for promotional purposes, to people attending an event, using a service, etc It’s especially common in reference to, e g , the very nice “swag bags” of gifts received by movie stars visiting various marketing venues during Oscar season so it comes with some cachet
  • On Saturday afternoon or in the Saturday afternoon?
    The choice of prepositions depends upon the temporal context in which you're speaking "On ~ afternoon" implies that the afternoon is a single point in time; thus, that temporal context would take the entire afternoon as one of several different afternoons, or in other words, one would use "on" when speaking within the context of an entire week "In ~ afternoon" suggests that the afternoon is
  • orthography - Free stuff - swag or schwag? - English Language . . .
    My company gives out free promotional items with the company name on it Is this stuff called company swag or schwag? It seems that both come up as common usages—Google searching indicates that the
  • etymology - Origin of the phrase free, white, and twenty-one . . .
    The fact that it was well-established long before OP's 1930s movies is attested by this sentence in the Transactions of the Annual Meeting from the South Carolina Bar Association, 1886 And to-day, “free white and twenty-one,” that slang phrase, is no longer broad enough to include the voters in this country




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