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  • Why do we say “gimme five?” - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Give me five, (together with its main variants such as slap me five, give me a five etc ) is a very common way greet or celebrate asking someone to hit their open hand against yours Give me five! (mainly AmE, informal): People say give me five! to show that they want you to hit your hand against their hand to show you are pleased about something
  • idioms - Etymology of cut someone some slack - English Language . . .
    "For three weeks in a row, 'Sky Pilot' was number one in Bien Hoa I keep thinking of the line, 'A young soldier so ill Looks at the sky pilot, remembers the words, "Thou Shall Not Kill" ' Man, give me some slack, huh Thank God for the sense of sound "—An MP in Vietnam And this appears to be attributed to Rolling Stone, 11 9 68
  • Any information or some information - English Language Usage . . .
    You use some Here is some information about The difference in the question is all in tone In the context of a question, any sounds a little more urgent — as though no information has been previously offered To ask for some information recognizes that there may be information out there, but you have a more specific information request
  • Grammar questions on the usage of some and some of the
    Today some teachers who are from a University in Canada came to our school to give an introductory talk about their University In your suggested revision, the comma after lecturers is egregiously wrong Comment Both proofreading requests and "how to improve my English" requests are off topic here; this may include rewriting requests as well
  • So, Some advice or some advices? Which is correct?
    In Oxford Learner's Dictionaries, "advice" is uncountable noun, so "Some advice" is the correct one However, googling "some advices" returns 400K results and in fact many formal English articles news use "some advices" as in this article on Yahoo News: "Real World 101: What Every Graduate Should Know"
  • Any or some in various questions? - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    SOME - when one has the object or knowledge of possession You have some bread Can you give me some bread? (SOME -is used because I know you have, so it is my opinion that SOME can be used in questions in which we know that the person has the object ) Do you have any bread? (ANY - one does not know or is not sure if the person has it or not )
  • grammaticality - Is it incorrect to say, Give me it? - English . . .
    That's my book Give me the book! you could use: That's my book Give me it! You would hardly say "Give the book me", even if the special form "Give it me" is used in some places If both me and it could be understood by the situation, you could just say (but perhaps not write): That's my book Give!
  • grammaticality - Is May I have some drink? incorrect? - English . . .
    So likewise, "give me a beer" and "give me some beer" are both valid, but not identical I note that while "give me some drink" and "give me a drink" are both found in ngrams, the latter is more common, and this is a growing trend
  • Meaning of the word cut in cut me some slack [duplicate]
    Roughly what purpose does the word "cut" serve in the sentence "cut me some slack"? I have a guess as to what this word means in that sentence English is actually my second language; my first was Polish So in literal translation from a common Polish phrase "to cut yourself a nap" means that you basically have yourself a nap
  • word choice - give me five and slap me five, any difference . . .
    OK You all must be too young! "Slap me five" was a term used in the 60s and 70s, when one person put their hand out in front of them and the other person slapped their hand It was a gesture, like a greeting A "cool" way of saying "hello " Probably more common in urban or inner city settings "Slap me Five" and "Give me Five" meant the same





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