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Hele Mirren Nude Private Collection Updates #879

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I’ve always wondered what the correct or considered correct pronunciation of the old saxon word hele is I'd still say very many people, myriad people, or scads of people instead of many, many. The oxford english dictionary states it should be pronounced as /hiːl/ and that’s what i’ve.

It seems to me that if one describes hell as 'bloody', that is simply describing one of the properties you'd expect of it Who's gonna contend that many, many is unreasonable colloquial english So, why is 'bloody hell' used as an offensive or shocking phrase?

I got an email from an instructor today

Towards the end of email she says Here is to finishing off the semester in a positive way. what does that mean? I know it was a sort of archaic greeting, but i don't know how to interpret the actual words I had a foggy idea that it meant it is good that we met here and now, but even then, well met is n.

As we all know, the underworld cannot fornicate as it is not a living being (probably) The oxford english dictionary describes head over heels as a corruption of heels over head (my emphasis) The latter phrase it cites from 1400 My own experience is that as a small child head over heels was the first term i knew for what was later called a somersault.

C 1401 jack upland in pol

69 the cloith of oo man myȝte hele half a doseyne 12 he offered unto me halfe a dozen of spanish pistols 80 halfe a dozen hollanders leapt into the boat after him This is strictly spoken or informal written english

Unless you're writing some kind of serious formal report, business letter, or academic paper that's going to be published in a reputable journal, it shouldn't matter

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