About 180,000 results
Open links in new tab
  1. Is there a word that means "every four weeks"?

    Is there a fourth word in this series: weekly, biweekly, triweekly, ...? If not, and I had to coin a word, then would "quadweekly", "quadriweekly", or some other word be more etymologically …

  2. Weekly meetings vs weekly meeting - English Language & Usage …

    Yes, in this case, you are referring to all the meetings, which happened weekly, so you would say: During my internship, I had weekly meetings where we discussed about the project.

  3. Use of "no less than" and no "fewer than" [duplicate]

    Feb 9, 2017 · @たかはし りょうじゅ I disagree with swbarnes2 regarding "no fewer than two hours". First of all, "two hours" is a discreet number of hours. Furthermore, the argument that …

  4. Are the words "mandatory," "obligatory," and "compulsory ...

    My landlord and mother made my weekly visits to the center compulsory if I was to continue running my business rent free from her basement. Obligatory: 808 cases the obligatory happy …

  5. Newest Questions - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    Q&A for linguists, etymologists, and serious English language enthusiasts

  6. hyphenation - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    A friend has asked about this and so far most seem to believe the best answer is: At the end of an eight- to ten-week project period, the team reports their findings and recommendations to their ...

  7. meaning - "Biweekly", "bimonthly", "biannual", and "bicentennial": …

    What do lengths of time with the "bi" prefix mean"? I have understood bicentennial as once every two hundred years, but biannual as meaning twice a year. Do biweekly and bimonthly mean …

  8. Why there are two different meanings for "triweekly"?

    Dec 29, 2015 · 1 Why there are two different meanings for “triweekly”? It's almost as though the language evolved rather than being properly designed. Is there another word to indicate a …

  9. Is there a word which means "having a frequency of decades" or …

    17 I have a document with the headings: daily, weekly, monthly, yearly, and decadely. Google Chrome, Google Docs, and Dictionary.com insist that "decadely" is not a word. Furthermore, …

  10. What is more appropriate: "weekly meet" or "weekly meeting"?

    Apr 18, 2016 · You "have a weekly meeting", meet is not a noun, while meeting is the gerund and is therefore a noun. Moreover, you say "to have something", where something is a noun.