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  • What is the origin of the phrase in this day and age?
    I’m eating bacon and eggs in this day and age With the right context or intonation, today could possibly be used for in this day and age, but in this day and age can’t be used for the 24-hour period we call today Here’s the OED entry for this day and age: day, n PHRASES P6 With another noun b this day and age: the current time
  • Nowadays vs today - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    When today has the meaning of "at the present time" "in this day and age", either can be used But when today has the meaning of "this very day" you cannot use nowadays instead – Aliénor
  • People of different ages who share the same birthday
    This question now asks what we can call people who were "all born on the same day of the year of any year" while that one asks about people born on the same day of the same year – Jim Commented Sep 2, 2015 at 18:05
  • Whats the term for siblings born 1+ years apart on the same day?
    Having a sibling born 2 years to the day from me, I have searched for this term most of my life, but not found one As such, and as language is merely an expression of randomly used phrases that come into popular acceptance, I decided to make up my own
  • nouns - Whats the difference between day and date? - English . . .
    Day may refer to: the day of the week (e g , Monday, Tuesday); the day of the month (e g, 2nd day of February); a unit of time (e g , this task would take 2 days to complete) A date on the other hand usually has the month and the year along with the day: the 21st February 2011 It also has a fixed quality I think
  • grammaticality - When is it correct to use the -wise suffix . . .
    One of the problems with the particular example user interface-wise is that while it needs to be parsed as (user interface)-wise, the most immediate parsing would probably be user (interface-wise), since hyphens typically bind tighter than spaces
  • Which is it: 1½ years old or 1½ year old? [duplicate]
    It would come much more naturally to a native speaker to say not "That man is a 50-year-old" [note also the hyphenation here] but "That is a 50-year-old man"; similarly, not "That kid is a one-and-a-half-year-old today" [a construction I have never heard anyone use when referring to half years as part of someone's age], but "That is a one-and-a-half-year-old kid" (omitting the 'today'), or
  • Is there any rule of order for time, date, place, building, etc?
    "At 5pm" describes an hour, which is more specific than a day (i e "this Sunday") And when combining place and time coordinates, it's really arbitrary whether the location or time coordinate should come first Depends on context and personal preference
  • Meaning of the Oscar Wilde quote about the tragedy of old age
    In order to reach old age, you must once have had to be young The 'tragedy' referred to, is that in old age, we remember only too well what we were in our youth - young, agile, and smooth-skinned You cannot be old without having first been young, I'm pretty sure Oscar Wilde appreciated the beauty of youth, and its loss in old age
  • Birthday vs. anniversary - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Birthday is generally used for people's birth dates and sometimes for a country's, as you've said Anniversary, on the other hand, is generally used for a marriage or relationship between two people, for example the day of the year two people got married It is also used to signify the day an important event happened





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