6 a hairpin road is a road with hairpin turns or bends Instead, you can save this post to reference later. A hairpin bend , named for its resemblance to a hairpin/bobby pin, is a bend in a road with a very acute inner angle, making it necessary for an oncoming vehicle to turn almost 180° to continue on the road.
Hayley Davies Bio, Husband, Boyfriend, Age, Wiki, Biography, Net Worth,
3 when you're referring to multiple instances of wind occurring, winds can be a correct usage
You wouldn't refer to all the wind on a single breezy day as winds, but were you describing a windy location you could say the winds at the castle are cold, because the wind occurs on separate occasions.
How do you spell windey [closed] sorry dumb question, but How do you spell windy as in a winding road could be described as windy not to be confuse with the weather is windy also, is there a better way i could have figured. I have been changing 'drafty' for 'draughty', or because of my confusion, removing the word altogether while subbing online articles
I'd appreciate guidance on which term is correct for uk english. Say we pick a city, notlondon Now assign a nickname, notlondon, the city of tears , tears being a metaphor for rain Should the word 'the' be capitalized
I think it counts as a proper noun, in which case the answer would be yes
The big apple seems obvious to me (although it seems 'the' is not part of the nick name as it is not capitalized), but when. As well, the unpleasantness that this word is supposed to. 1 do you usually say the sky is partially cloudy or the sky is partly cloudy Is there any difference between partly and partially in the last sentence
Is there any difference between partly and partially in general They both sound natural to me. You'll need to complete a few actions and gain 15 reputation points before being able to upvote Upvoting indicates when questions and answers are useful
What's reputation and how do i get it