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- Napkin vs. tissue - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
1 While the words 'tissue' and 'napkin' aren't exclusive, in that 'tissue' refers to the quality of the paper whereas 'napkin' refers to the purpose, in coloquial conversation a 'tissue' will typically refer to a facial tissue, used for blowing one's nose
- Does the word, ‘napkin’ have a metaphoric or symbolic meaning other . . .
Does the word, “napkin” have any specific metaphoric or symbolic meaning other than “a small square piece of cloth or paper, used while you are eating to protect your clothes or to clean your mouth or fingers” defined by Cambridge English Dictionary? Is “Expert on the napkin” a word on everybody’s lips?
- Is there a word for the towel on a waiters arm?
Napkin is the correct term: what about that waiter who carries a napkin draped over one arm? In part, it’s practicality It’s readily available to mop up any accidental spills or other messes at your table But the practice dates back a couple of hundred years in France; that was how waiters carried the napkins they would distribute to diners Napkins have been in use for thousands of
- U vs. Non-U words in contemporary British English
Having traveled extensively in England in the 70s and early 80s, I became aware of U and Non-U as a copy of the book was typically in the WC of a private house for ready reference And I learned that "serviette" which had been considered U as "napkin" was too close to nappy for comfort, was fading and nappies could actually be called diapers I learned from a particularly language-conscious
- What do you call this mechanical device? - English Language Usage . . .
The "Self-Operating Napkin" is activated when soup spoon (A) is raised to mouth, pulling string (B) and thereby jerking ladle (C), which throws cracker (D) past parrot (E) Parrot jumps after cracker and perch (F) tilts, upsetting seeds (G) into pail (H)
- phrase requests - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
Is there one word (or phrase) to describe all forms of disposable cutlery etc, such as paper cups, paper napkins, paper plastic spoons and forks, plates, etc ? I thought of disposable cutlery its
- punctuation - Standard format for phone numbers? - English Language . . .
Unfortunately, I don't know the local national conventions (for business cards, letterhead, correspondence, scrawling your number on a napkin at a bar, etc ) in any country but the US
- phrase usage - Is the expression to hire help a euphemism for to . . .
I'm not sure "to hire help" is Referring to an employee or employees as "hired help" can be a euphemism for calling that employee or those employees "servants," especially in a pejorative sense and especially when "the" is used with it and or a minimizing modifier like "just" appears beforehand That's why I'm not sure and haven't put an answer, for on one hand, "to hire help" doesn't
- Difference between computation and calculation
For something on a piece of paper, especially a napkin or back of an envelope, I would use calculation Not accidentally, I think calculation implies something you would do with a calculator; computation something that would require a computer
- Is ‘drop by’ formal language? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
Today I had a session with my Japanese language partner and she told me this: After buying the present for my father's birthday, we dropped by at the bakery to buy cake I feel like drop by is in
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