So many fisticuffs. Knife fights. Heated discussions. Actually, we don’t really decide - the English-speaking people do, through the manner in which they use words, and we try our best to keep up with their decisions, and to register them. #AskMW
Words are judged by the company they keep, and if the word appears in serious publications and in serious contexts with other serious words, it loses its informal status.
Here are some words that were labeled ‘slang’ in our dictionary in 1916: awful, bootleg, cahoots, coed, fluke, hunch, jamboree, jinx, and leery - all have managed to shake off that usage label. #AskMW
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Some words go together like jelly and peanut butter… wait, that sounds super weird.
A pair of words that is used in a fixed order in an idiomatic expression is called an ‘irreversible binomial.’
‘Peanut butter and jelly’ is an example of an irreversible binomial.
🧵⬇️
The order of these expressions is so fixed that the phrase becomes a standard part of the vocabulary.
Also, there isn’t ONE reason that determines order, but we do encounter some patterns.
Irreversible Binomials w/ Alliteration
- rock and roll
- sticks and stones
- the birds and the bees
- dine and dash
- mix and match
- wet and wild
- dos and don’ts
We don’t mean to sound possessive, but let’s talk about how to make last names plural.
The plurals of last names are just like the plurals of most nouns. They typically get formed by adding -s.
Jill and Tim Smith→ the Smiths
the Clarence family→ the Clarences
If the name already ends in s or z, the plural is formed by adding -es.
the Fernandez family → the Fernandezes
Mr. and Mrs. Jones → the Joneses
For Names that end in y, you only need to add an s to make them plural
the Daley family → the Daleys
If you want to talk about something that belongs to more than one member of a family, you start with the plural form and add an apostrophe to show possession:
the Smiths' car
a party at the Fernandezes' house
the Daleys' driveway