
What is the meaning of the expression "We can table this"?
Mar 14, 2011 · Do you want the "correct" answer, or an interpretation of what the person meant? "Tabling" is improper to do via email, so this usage was very informal.
"Tabled", US vs UK - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
Possible Duplicate: What is the meaning of the expression “We can table this”? Here's an example snippet for some context. Ann had an idea. We tabled her idea. In the UK this means "We put t...
Origin of "Turns the Table" idiom
Mar 11, 2017 · This is the first thing that came to my mind, with this phrase. Jesus did turn the tables of the money changers over, in the marketplace, and in so doing, reminded us all that we cannot love …
differences - Tables have turned or Tables are turned? - English ...
Apr 21, 2017 · I've never heard of "the tables are turned", but Googling does suggest some use: I would say they mean the same thing but "tables have turned" is more common and makes more sense. …
What does it mean: think “table” and not “kill"?
Sep 23, 2016 · The terms are from "parliamentary procedure". "Tabling" a bill or motion puts off consideration of it, possibly for a specified period, possibly indefinitely. "Killing" a bill/motion (I think …
Do I say "I am going" or "I will be going"? [duplicate]
Which sounds more correct? I am going to the post office in 2 hours I will be going to the post office in 2 hours Is there any difference between the two sentences?
future - Is "will be going to" correct? - English Language & Usage ...
Oct 18, 2014 · @Jim: That link is not really useful, since that includes many, many irrelevant occurrences of "will be going to". In fact, looking through the Google Book Search results, I find …
How does a word come to have two completely opposite meanings?
For example, there is a verb used in political discussions, "to table". Common usage: "The bill to increase the police budget was tabled". What's odd is that this word means two different things …
idioms - Holding off on it or Holding it off or Holding off of it ...
The idiom is: "Hold off on," your first one is correct. I've always found that remarkably clunky and difficult to understand if taken piece by piece, however. You could try "Putting something into a holding …
What's a term for pure text data (non-image non-video non-audio)?
The data type which includes image, video and audio is named as " binary data ". So, if you are storing data that you want to represent as text, such as a blog post or product description you may use " non …