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History of have a good one - English Language Usage Stack Exchange The term "have a good day" was the phrase of the times Everyone used it, I had to hear it so many times during the course of the day that I nearly went mad with the boredom of the phrase So, after a while I started to return "Have a good day" with "Have A Good One" meaning have a good whatever got you off
Why we say an historical but a history [duplicate] Closed 13 years ago Possible Duplicate: When should I use “a” versus “an” in front of a word beginning with the letter h? Why do we say an historical but a history? This question was originally posed by @shanselman on Twitter
Whats the origin of the idiom dont give it the time of day? I Googled the phrase "time of day idiom" because I was particularly interested in the origin etymology of the "time of day" part I readily found the meaning (which I already knew), but was stymied as to its origin (which is what I wanted) Thus, I ask: what is the origin etymology of the idiom?
Etymology of history and why the hi- prefix? That is why feminists, for example, rejected the word history and championed the notion of herstory during the 1970s, says Dictionary com’s Jane Solomon, “to point out the fact that history has mostly come from a male perspective ” The “his” in history has nothing, linguistically, to do with the pronoun referring to a male person
What is the origin of the phrase Top of the morning to you? Here "the top of the morning" again means "the beginning of the day"—although it is not clear from the context whether this is synonymous with "dawn" or some other marker of the earliest hour of the day
At Night or In the Night? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange In olden times, when the time expression "at night" was originated, night might have been thought as a point of time in the day because there wasn't any activity going on and people were sleeping that time unlike daytime It represents the dark hours and the late time of the day
What is the origin of the phrase til the cows come home? I was in Bavaria in the late 1970s and early 1980s and I actually saw the cows coming home The cows all belonged to different farmers and would go up into the pastures for the day, and at the end of the day they would “come home” You could actually see them all walking together and splitting off when they got to their farms