John didn't want that, he technically asked for the blue one.
Technically, he was a pirate but he didn't think so.
The old lettuce looked disgusting, but it was technically consumable.
Technically you just typed one :P "The website did not refresh immediately."
stiffed can't really be used in a regular sentence, stiffened can be used but not stiffed, stiffed is technically not a real word or even a form of a real word
technically, your question. perhaps a sentence like "In china, people use calligraphy instead of a written alphabet
Technically, you can't, by virtue of the fact that "esteblish" is not a word. Perhaps "establish" is what you meant.
"Gigantic" is not technically a 'proper' word. It could be used in a sentence like "The apple was gigantic", but that is not a formal sentence and could not be used in an essay for example.
technically speaking, you cant. 'Reporting' is what we would call a fire hazard, and therefore is to dangerous for a sentence.
reproduce and reproduction both are different technically, as there grammatical categories are different. Reproduce is verb, and reproduction is the name of the act of reproducing. We technically use them in different context in a sentence...
Yes,it is technically proper grammar, of second generation in origin, however, alot of people misuse it in context.
While it is technically grammatically correct to end a sentence with "at," it is generally best to try and rephrase the sentence to avoid this. Ending a sentence with a preposition like "at" can make the sentence sound less formal or awkward in some contexts.
A SENTENCE WITH THE WORD OUNCE A SENTENCE WITH THE WORD OUNCE A SENTENCE WITH THE WORD OUNCE A SENTENCE WITH THE WORD OUNCE