However, these days, no one pays attention to such niceties, which means that everybody pretty much gets called whatever Post facto also means after the fact, so it should be sufficient Just ask them how they wish to be addressed
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That guarantees that you won't address them in a way contrary to their own preferences.
Does ex have a full form
Google dictionary has this information about the origin of ex What is the proper way to use the ex prefix to more than one word My ex baseball coach taught me Ex by itself (no hyphen) doesn't seem right either
Whichever rule you choose and stick to, you'll be swimming against the linguistic tide with much of your text! For example, is there any difference between the following sentences With your ex out of the picture, we can finally start dating With your ex out of the equation, we can finally start dating.
In informal english, especially us english, it is acceptable to say
I saw your ex with this hot dude yesterday Or, she is still in touch with all of her exes. Post facto is almost always part of ex post facto Post hoc is currently about as common in ngrams, but more common in google search results
I was thinking that this sort of anticipatory assimilation in which the voicing from the vowel following the ks makes the gz, also applies when the following sound is a voiced consonant, but it turns out there are too few examples of those to get a good feel for it In legal language i have come across the term ex post facto Isn't ex redundant in this phrase