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Corrupt or corrupted? - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
Should I say "the thing is corrupted" or "the thing is corrupt"? Would they carry different meanings? i.e "My hard drive is corrupted, so all of my information is lost" vs "My hard drive is corr...
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For computer science, are the files corrupted or corrupt?
When it is said that "the files are corrupt", it isn't clear whether the files were corrupt from the time they were created, due to problems with data entry, ETC., or that the files became corrupt after a problem. Saying that "the files are now corrupted" implies that there was a clean state for the files in the past, and that they need to be returned to the clean state for the software to ...
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Adjective for 'made of pus' or 'corrupted by pus' or something of ...
Adjective for 'made of pus' or 'corrupted by pus' or something of something of pus Ask Question Asked 6 years, 5 months ago Modified 2 years ago
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etymology - Where does the "e" in "appear" come from? - English ...
[Peer is an easier form to pronounce than pear, so it's become corrupted, in much the same way as Antipodean English might change the pronunciation of pear to be less like English pear and more like peer.] Apparent has a more direct route from aparoir/apparere (that is, from the OF aparant), and never changed to e: it's always been a.
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Origin of "one man's trash is another man's treasure"
This might be tough considering the gesture is iterated so many ways, but it's worth a shot. What is the origin of the expression one man's trash is another man's treasure?
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Word for "not understandable" [duplicate] - English Language & Usage ...
For instance: The message was staticky and corrupted, making it not understandable. "Not understandable" sounds strange and like a double negative. I'm looking for a single word to take the place. Some results suggest "bizarre" and "alien", but that's not what I'm going for. The speaker knows what it is, but can't understand it.
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Meaning of 'signifier' - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
In this article paragraph five reads as follows: - Like the trend for “wellness” and clean eating, attachment parenting posits that the modern world has corrupted what was once pure, through
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What French phrase is the origin of "gardyloo?"
To make its meaning utterly clear and immediately apparent, those online sources should state "Gardyloo" as coming from French "se garder de," literally "guard oneself from" [=protect oneself from; take cover/shelter], corrupted into "Garder" in old, colloquial French.
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Origin of 'bog-standard' - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
Which at the time was as good a standard as you could get. At the time Britain was still a strong engineering/ manufacturing base. Japan was up and coming, while China and Hong Kong were the cheap and simple. How times have changed. Like lots of things like gay, the word has become corrupted to have a totally different meaning.
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Is there a difference between "innocent" and "not guilty"?
3 free from moral wrong; not corrupted: an innocent child simple; naive: she is a poor, innocent young creature 4 not intended to cause harm or offense; harmless: So the OED gives precedent to innocence in a particular sense, so it is okay to say "I'm innocent of murder", and plead one's innocence to a crime.