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That's evidenced by one of the earliest citations of the phrase in print - Charles Molloy's The Coquet, or, The English Chevalier, 1718: "Tis he! I know him now: I shall jump over the Moon for Joy!"That's evidenced by one of the earliest citations of the phrase in print - Charles Molloy's The Coquet, or, The English Chevalier, 1718:
No, the phrase "at the most earliest" is not correct grammar. "Most" and "earliest" are both superlatives, so using them together is redundant. The correct phrase would be "at the earliest" or "at the most."
The first occurrence of the phrase "I am legend" that I'm personally aware of comes from the Richard Matheson story "I Am Legend."
The phrase "les deux" translates to "the two" in English.
Alcuna volta per me is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "sometime for me".Specifically, the feminine adjective alcuna is "any, some". The feminine noun volta means "time" in terms of occurrence. The preposition per means "for". The personal pronoun me translates as "me".The pronunciation will be "ahl-KOO-nah VOHL-tah pehr mey"* in Italian.*The sound is similar to that in the English exclamation "Hey!"
'La phrase', in French, means 'sentence' in English
"Good morning" is an English phrase.
Alcuna volta is an Italian equivalent of the English word "sometime".Specifically, the feminine adjective alcuna means "any, some". The feminine noun volta translates as "time" in terms of an occurrence. The pronunciation will be "ahl-KOO-nah VOHL-tah" in Italian.
There are a few ways that one could translate the phrase 'slownik angielsko polski' into English. The phrase could be translated as "dictionary English Polish" or the phrase could be meant to mean "English to Polish dictionary".
The earliest meaning of the word "quick" in English is alive. So, biblically, the King James Version, it means those that are still alive. The phrase therefore means the alive and the dead.
It actually is sudden. It means an unexpected occurrence. It's rarely used outside the phrase "all of a sudden."
The phrase "double whammy" tends to refer to when two things happen at once or in sequence. The term is usually used when referring to something that is a bad occurrence.