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heighth查看 heighth 在百度字典中的解释百度英翻中〔查看〕
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  • Whats with the heigth pandemic? - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    Mag 142 — To such a heighth is licentiousness risen 1765 T Hutchinson Hist Mass I 57 — Carrying antinomianism to the heighth 1809 Roland Fencing 22 — It depends on the person’s heighth 1918 H Bindloss Agatha’s Fortune xxv, — It was hardly a range of hills, but rather what prospectors call a ‘heighth’ of land What the
  • Origin of height - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Century Dictionary says "there is no reason for the distinction of vowel between high and height The modern pronunciation with -t emerged 13c but wasn't established until 19c ; Milton used highth and heighth is still colloquial in English Compare Dutch hoogte, Danish hjöde What is the correct and definite origin of Height?
  • etymology - What is the origin of the -th suffix? What is the . . .
    Note that many do say heighth [haɪ (t)θ] or [haɪʔθ] for height, by analogy with those words that do have th, and since gh is null in modern English I'd say weighth is less common, and for other -ght words it's hardly heard at all People can complain all they want about it being incorrect, but hey, the only reason it was -t and not -th in the first place is gone, so why not?
  • Spelling of high vs height - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    In Middle English the forms in -t were predominant in the north, and since 1500 have increasingly prevailed in the literary language; though heighth, highth were abundant in southern writers till the 18th cent , and are still affected by some
  • Single word for the height above something
    When we talk about height, usually we mean the distance from an object to an external zero reference such as the ground I'm looking for a single word that describes how much height is resting on or
  • single word requests - X, Y, Z — horizontal, vertical and . . .
    When working in a 2D coordinate system you could say that X is the horizontal axis and Y is the vertical axis Extending this to 3D, is there a similar word for the Z axis? (I'm aware of Width, H
  • Asked my height or asked of my height? - English Language Usage . . .
    "Asked my height" sounds strange, while "asked of my height" sounds like an overkill "Asked what my height was" sounds terrible
  • differences - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Some words end in th (length, width), and others end in ht (height, fight, tonight, caught) I sometimes have difficulties in spelling such words because I don't know which ending to choose Is
  • Focussed or focused? Rules for doubling the last consonant when . . .
    The rules are much more complicated, and I don't think it's a good idea to post them all here Re: doubling of the final consonant in an unstressed syllable Pam Peters (in "The Cambridge Guide to English Usage") argues that when the final syllable is identical with a monosyllabic word, the final consonant is also doubled in British English: eavesdropped, kidnapped, formatted, worshipped
  • What is the difference between proven and proved?
    The New Oxford American Dictionary has the following note For complex historical reasons, prove developed two past participles: proved and proven Both are correct and can be used more or less interchangeably: this hasn't been proved yet; this hasn't been proven yet Proven is the more common form when used as an adjective before the noun it modifies: a proven talent (not a proved talent





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