The term have a good day was the phrase of the times I have been poking around wondering about the colloquial usage of on tomorrow in southern american english and wondering about its origins Everyone used it, i had to hear it so many times during the course of the day that i nearly went mad with the boredom of the phrase
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So, after a while i started to return have a good day with have a good one meaning have a good whatever got you off.
3 the day is young corresponds to the hour is early or better still simply it is early
To me the day is early would be slightly unusual, but might suggest the early part of a longer period, such as a month or year. “it’s like groundhog day every day,” jamison admitted of their epic losing streak Yes, i’ve read up on and know what groundhog day literally is A holiday that celebrates a quaint folk tradition of determining the seasons.
That is why feminists, for example, rejected the word history and championed the notion of herstory during the 1970s, says dictionary.com’s jane solomon, “to point out the fact that history has mostly come from a male perspective.” the “his” in history has nothing, linguistically, to do with the pronoun referring to a male person. Holiday is a compound stemming from the words holy and day The word 'holiday' first surfaced in the 1500's replacing the earlier word 'haliday' which was recorded before 1200 in the old english book ancrene riwle. The book speech acts in the history of english dedicates an entire chapter to greetings in english language history
Among the greetings that it covers, i would say that the closest one to hi
In spelling and usage is hail! We normally use superlative degrees all the time to emphasize something strongly That being the case why we don't use better night or best night How did good night become such an integral part of our usage when we had other options?