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  • Whats the difference between “bucket” and “pail”?
    Squires tossed pails of water over cookfires, while soldiers took out their oilstones to give their blades one last good lick The lamplight revealed a pail overflowing with feces in one corner and a huddled shape in another She kicked over the waste pail
  • What is the origin of the phrase beyond the pale?
    Pale in this idiom comes from Latin pālus 'stake'; it means a fencepost, and by ordinary extension it also means the fence itselt, and the area it contains or delimits So beyond the pale just means "outside the boundaries" Normally, of course, the "boundaries" are metaphors for human activities, rather than referring to a physically bounded location
  • Another word for carrying pole? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    5 The English word for this is "yoke" It is not very common today, as the object it refers to is not common in developed countries today Edit: definition 3 a from the OED: A frame fitted to the neck and shoulders of a person for carrying a pair of pails, baskets, etc
  • History of tough as nails - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Early instances of 'hard as nails' Matches for "hard as nails," meanwhile, go back to at least 1820 From John Clare, "My Mary," in Poems Descriptive of Rural Life and Scenery (1820): Who, frost and snow, as hard as nails, Stands out o' doors, and never fails To wash up things and scour pails? My Mary And from " Notes on the United States of America," in Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine
  • word choice - What are these containers called for waste? - English . . .
    There are so many ways to call these containers for waste (correct me if some of them might sound weird unnatural to use) garbage can, trash can, rubbish can, pedal can, garbage bin, trash bin,
  • Why is a jug of draft beer called a growler?
    Sense 4 ["A pail or other container used for carrying beer, especially a half-gallon or gallon glass jug with a gasket or screw cap" derives from] the sound made by carbon dioxide escaping from under the lids of metal pails in which beer was carried in the past
  • meaning - Origin of tootsie or tootsy (foot) - English Language . . .
    I was just sitting thinking I had cold tootsies meaning my toes or feet! This got me wondering, where on earth does the word tootsie tootsy come from? I did Google this and got definitions (appare
  • Is it ok to say this number feigns in comparison to
    I am writing a report where I want to say something like: The number of structures in the PDB has been steadily increasing, with nearly 140 thousand structures currently available However, this




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