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  1. What is the origin of the British "guv"? Is it still used colloquially ...

    Guv is used plenty though, plenty of people use boss instead, in the same way. Particularly in immigrant communities. I personally use sir in the same way, as do some more old fashioned …

  2. Origin of "It's a fair cop" - English Language & Usage Stack …

    Sep 26, 2018 · Cop-shop "police station" is attested from 1941. The children's game of cops and robbers is attested from 1900. A user on Word Reference answering a question about a …

  3. What is the difference between "’ll" and "will"?

    Is there any difference in the meaning when we use 'll or will? For example, I will go to university tomorrow. I'll go to university tomorrow.

  4. "Can I help you, love?" Love as a form of address: is it used ...

    The clichè term guv'nor which used to be a sign of respect, is virtually extinct in London. Female strangers, if they seem friendly and /or need assistance will be addressed as love regardless …

  5. etymology - What is a "cike" as in "taking the cike"? - English ...

    The whole paragraph is in written in 'accent': “That ’ere ’ouse, guv’nor, is the rummiest I ever was in. Blyme! but it ain’t been touched sence a hundred years. There was dust that thick in the …

  6. "Will I" vs. "I will" - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    Aug 11, 2015 · As in the following sentence: When I have the time, I will watch a new episode of one of the aforementioned Netflix shows, though rarely I will watch one of the shows below: …

  7. Do I say "I am going" or "I will be going"? [duplicate]

    Which sounds more correct? I am going to the post office in 2 hours I will be going to the post office in 2 hours Is there any difference between the two sentences?

  8. etymology - Origin of the expression "Dead to rights"? - English ...

    Feb 18, 2020 · W.S. Farmer & J.L. Henley, Slang and Its Analogues, vol. 2 (1891), says that "dead to rights" means "certain; without doubt," and asserts that it is simply an amplification of …

  9. Origin of "blimey" - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    According to Etymonline: (It is also used in excitement.) blimey by 1889, probably a corruption of (God) blind me! First attested in a slang dictionary which defines it as "an apparently

  10. etymology - Origin of "You're nicked, sunshine!" - English …

    Mar 17, 2018 · Criminals, at one stage, chose to deliberately repeat such well-worn expressions on arrest 'You've got me bang to rights, guv, I'm well and truly nicked'. When read out in court …