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  • phrase meaning - What does the dog who caught the car mean? - English . . .
    Stephen Colbert likens Trump team to the dog that caught the car Trump and his team, he continued, are “like a dog who spent his whole life chasing a car — now he has to drive the car ” Entertainment Weekly article Does this most generally mean what Wordspy says? Also, is my reading of Sam Harris' use of it to mean "dead dog" right?
  • Meaning of back the car up - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    A normal meaning of "back up" is to drive a vehicle in reverse It doesn't appear in dictionary definitions of the phrase because it's little more than the literal meaning of the two words
  • I have got a car (Present Simple or Present Perfect?)
    In many cases the two end up being almost synonymous (having acquired a car implies now having it), except for a nuance in meaning emphasising the process of obtaining it or the state of currently owning it
  • Automobile vs car: How are these two words different?
    The two term came into use meaning "a motor vehicle with four wheels; usually propelled by an internal combustion engine; " about the same year (1895 1896) I agree with you that automobile may sound less colloquial, car is the more used expression
  • Suped-up: is it a real idiom (vs souped-up)
    Etymology soup (drug injected into a racehorse to improve its performance) First Known Use 1924, in the meaning defined at sense 1 M-W Earlier example: What is the maximum speed of this engine when it is standard and when it is ' souped up '? "Variety of Questions Regarding Maxwell" in Motor Age, Jan 19, 1922
  • meaning - Why are muscle cars called so? - English Language Usage . . .
    Regarding why muscle cars are not called 'supercars' and 'sports cars', the reason why not, as might be expected, is going to come down to an unverifiable matter of opinion However, my semi-educated guesses are as follows: 'Sports car' is and was in general use for a broader category of cars 'Supercar' is and was, like 'sports car', a more generic term in general use, without the specificity
  • Get in vs. get on - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Some examples: Get in: a car taxi van truck, etc Get on: a bus plane bike truck, etc How can one choose whether to use in or on? Note that in some cases, such as the example with truck, either preposition is possible but the choice affects the meaning
  • Where in the world does a lift mean a ride in the car?
    Offering someone a lift means "a ride in a car," or more accurately, "transport to the place the driver's already going" in the UK too
  • An old car in bad condition - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    53 Banger noun, British informal An old car in poor condition: they’ve only got an old banger More example sentences: On a family visit to Windsor Safari Park just to get used to his new car, a jumpy old banger with steering wheel stick-shift gears, Ron was flagged down by a policeman
  • Which one is correct? He doesnt have got a car or He doesnt have a car
    John has got a car - John hasn't got a car - Has John got a car? John has got a car - *John doesn't have got a car - *Does John have got a car? There's a bit more to this puzzle in reality, however, since in verb phrase ellipsis contexts, the have got construction does seem to allow do for many speakers: John's got a car, hasn't he?





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