no
Literally "The Hour". It is often used to mean "time for" or just "time".
Literally is an adverb, yes.Some example sentences are:He literally just wet himself.I will literally be five minutes.
It can mean just "OK" or literally "It is good."
This layer is literally just called 'Young Trees' , it's between the 'Canopy Layer' and the 'Shrub Layer'
There is 3 "main" ones. UDP, TCP, and ARP. UDP - Used for very fast messaging between servers TCP - Used for things like chats, http, etc.. ARP - "Address Resolution Protocol" this is what's used to make it so that you are assigned an IP address.. There are thousands, literally, of protocols out there. Those are just the ones I believe fallinto this category.
They have literally just had a tour :|
with words, literally just say it.
"Ut vales?""Quomodo habes?"
For Literally Everything.
No, just as the Bible or any other "Holy" book should not be taken literally.
It means "land between the rivers"
The word for taking things literally is just that, taking things literally. This can be a problem for small children or for people who have trouble detecting sarcasm or humor.