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andreadallover.com
| | grammargeddon.com
11.5 parsecs away

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| | Is that a shocker to you? First, let me explain an infinitive. It's a verb form in English that uses the word "to" with the root form of the verb. The result, a kind of verbal, is called an infinitive. It can function as a noun, as in "To err is human; to forgive, divine."...
| | www.grammarphobia.com
27.2 parsecs away

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| | When the word "milk" appeared in Old English, it meant the fluid from mammary glands, but that sense soon widened to include the milky liquid from plants.
| | ben.page
30.7 parsecs away

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| | www.grammarphobia.com
126.6 parsecs away

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| English speakers have been glottalizing the letter "t" since at least the mid-19th century. The pronunciation is common today in American and British English.