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  1. What does the slang word "hammered" actually mean?

    Jul 6, 2015 · "Hammered" can mean either drunk, or attacked strongly. "Screwed up" can mean to cause (someone) to be emotionally or mentally troubled. To use all these in the way you may have meant: …

  2. meaning in context - English Language Learners Stack Exchange

    Apr 18, 2017 · 0 "hammered that home" can have two different meanings. First there is the expression that the nail that sticks up is the one that gets hammered. So if the nail is pounded in, then it …

  3. Can an adjective be used after a noun? - English Language Learners ...

    Apr 10, 2018 · Of course you can have an adjective after a noun in a sentence like "These are the sorts of acorns red squirrels like." Your question more specifically ought to be "Can an adjective be placed …

  4. Now when vs now that and the difference between them

    Nov 12, 2024 · These sentences don't really make sense without more context. The only context that I could imagine fixing @KateBunting's objections would be if "now" means "it hasn't been this way in …

  5. formality - Does using quotes around an informal word make it ...

    Aug 9, 2024 · For instance, if you need to say "Operating this machinery while drunk is prohibited," then "drunk" is fine and there's no need to use colloquialisms like "hammered" or "shitfaced." But there's …

  6. What does "You're up there" mean? - English Language Learners Stack ...

    Nov 23, 2024 · Be up there with someone is an idiom and is informal. It means to be equal to someone else in ability or in a particular skill: As a composer, he was up there with the best. Cambridge …

  7. meaning - English Language Learners Stack Exchange

    Nov 2, 2016 · In line with this theme of competition comes the expression “win her heart.” This implies that a male must compete for females in some way. Does the writer use inversion in this highlighted …

  8. How do we use "drill in"? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange

    Jun 26, 2019 · Those pop-quizzes really [drilled in]/ [hammered in] the importance of studying every night. It can also be used in other circumstances to refer quite literally to routine practice, similar (but …

  9. That is I vs That is me - English Language Learners Stack Exchange

    Sep 29, 2023 · It depends on your context. The “is I” [so-called] rule is one of many nineteenth-century creations of prescriptivists trying to make English fit the grammar of Latin (Why not force, say, …

  10. "contents" or "content", which to use when talking about a book?

    Feb 29, 2020 · Both "contents" and "content" can be used to refer to things in a book, etc, but they mean slightly different things: "contents" means separable pieces that are put together to make up the …