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Citations in the Category English
English language, including all dialects and variations. You can also see entries assigned to this category.

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—fu suffix The purpose is to make a button generator accessable from the web where users can create their sets of images. I do this with the Perl-Fu. [] [full cite] (Sep. 15, 2004)
–bagger suffix One-bagger—one alarm fire. Two-bagger—two alarm fire. Three-bagger—Three alarm fire. Four-bagger—four alarm fire. [ ] [full cite] (May. 13, 2005)
–bagger suffix [Sugg. by use in baseball to classify base hits]…a fire (classified by the specified number of alarms). [ ] [full cite] (May. 31, 2005)
–fu suffix This is the typical approach for low-end RAID adapters, and it isn’t necessarily bad—it does require good driver-writing-fu though. [] [full cite] (Sep. 15, 2004)
–fu suffix Master of DejaNews Search-Fu. [] [full cite] (Sep. 15, 2004)
–fu suffix anyway, it’s shy on monsters and breasts, but great religon-fu. [] [full cite] (Sep. 15, 2004)
.5 generation n. Sociologists call Mr. Singh and his cohort the “.5 generation,” distinct from the “1.5 generation”—younger transplants who became bicultural through school and work. Immigrant elders leave a familiar home, some without electricity or running water, for a multigenerational home in communities like Fremont that demographers call ethnoburbs. [] [full cite] (Aug. 31, 2009)
1-800 car n. Eventually, hot rods became street rods, what the unkind call “1-800” cars—assembled out of purpose-built, pre-engineered parts. With sparkling chrome and glistening paint, street rods tend to be a lot more show than go. [ ] [full cite] (Feb. 25, 2008)
1.5 generation n. We who sat huddled in that E.S.L. class grew up to represent the so-called 1.5 generation. Many of us came to America in our teens, already rooted in Korean ways and language. We often clashed with the first generation, whose minimal command of English traps them in a time-warped immigrant ghetto, but we identified even less with the second generation, who, with their Asian-American angst and anchorman English, struck us as even more foreign than the rest of America. [ ] [full cite] (Nov. 21, 2004)
10/90 gap n. This disparity has been called the “10/90 gap,” a term coined after a commission in 1990 provided research showing that only approximately 10 percent of the resources spent on health research go to the problems afflicting 90 percent of the world’s population. [ ] [full cite] (Nov. 15, 2004)

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Recent Catchwords
sorry gift n. (2/19)
break the ton v. phr. (2/19)
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startle factor n. (2/13)
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