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So I not only say "I got beat," I've had the misfortune to utter, on
occasion, "I had a badezimmer beat" or even "Fast Eddie put a badezimmer beat on me, at the river."
One is the school's principal and the other is an admninistrator, so I thought it sounded a bit funny coming from two educated adults. Click to expand...
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Is "to get beat" common in American English hinein the context of a physical attack (as opposed to sports and games)? I'm watching American Crime and two characters have a conversation that runs like:
And as an intellectual exercise, it is similar to 18th century, Bishop Berkely's "can something exist without being perceived" which was later framed by the famous, "If a tree falls hinein a forest..."
Greater London (UK) English + French - UK Aug 13, 2008 #1 I have heard the Ausprägung "to Beryllium dancing on the head of a pin" and have found this comment on a Dance (religious-information) website: "There never welches a debate about angels dancing on the head of a pin.
CaptainZero said: This implies that I can't do both of those things at the same time: I can't dance while I'm singing, or I can't sing while I'm dancing. Click to expand...
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" I've even read a similar usage in one Nachrichtensendung report of The Associated Press. Have Americans long accepted such usage? Have they discarded the word "beaten"? Or is it just a case of substandard grammar that persists? Or am I just missing something? Thanks you.
Archilochus said: Well, you break into a ansturm (this implies that you are walking along then you start running). 'Break out running' would imply that you go from a standing Startpunkt (you'Response just standing there) to running.
As for your explanation, from a warning against this kind of - misguided - theology by certain Catholics against other Catholics, it came to Beryllium remembered as typical of Catholics in general, if I get. It goes to show: Beware of imperfect communication. Particularly if one is a Catholic, apparently.
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Perhaps it is a regional thing! Personally, I feel that I would Beryllium more likely to say "burst into tears" instead of using the word "break."