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What do you call the windows that run the length of a building? These large glass panels that act like a big screen to the outside and are generally stationary (cannot be opened or moved) are collectively called stationary windows They are also called picture windows or fixed windows The sole purpose of these glass panels are to provide people with a full view of the outside, originally installed to face picturesque views of mountains or valleys or
What does the brass mean, exactly, in military context? In books by many different authors I encountered phrases like this: He curses the brass for not caring whether he lives or dies From context, it seemed to me that it meant high-rank officers, ab
word choice - What are the high ends of castles called? - English . . . The spires are essentially just big spikes atop the turrets; they may have lighting rods, weather vanes, radio antennae, flags or other decorative features attached Or they can be just big spikes - what makes them spires is that they are above the roof of the turrets and pointy
word request - What is a balcony on the top floor or the rooftop of a . . . 4 I know a room or an apartment on the top floor or on the rooftop can be called an attic or a penthouse depending on the room or the apartment I wonder what a balcony on the rooftop or on the top floor would be called in English I am talking about a balcony like the ones in the pictures below
I never saw it before vs. I have never seen it before For example: I never saw such a big fish in real life before This is the first time I have never seen such a big fish in real life before This is the first time Until recently, I would have thought that the first sentences was incorrect
What do moosie and cheesebread mean in this context? The first time I went to testicular cancer, Bob the big moosie, the big cheesebread moved in on top of me in Remaining Men Together and started crying Source: Fight Club by Chuck Palahniuk I didn't
Someone who always goes to extremes in everything What do the native speakers usually call a person who does everything to excess and often goes to extremes in doing everything or is too excessive in anything? Let's make some examples: Imag
Which can be used before distance among much large long huge big? All of the adjectives you have suggested can be used to modify "distance," although all except "much" require the indefinite article, as in "a huge distance," "a large distance," "a long distance," and "a big distance " Please note that "shallow" can also be applied to a person, meaning, "someone who is superficial, intellectually unsophisticated, primarily interested in material possessions