there is none...."whoa" is not a noun
"Every other word that he says is an expletive." "It is easier to use an expletive than to think of an appropriate word." "Naming your dog after an expletive and yelling it in public is not a good idea."
An expletive is a swear word. Think of your own examples.
Euphemistically commenting:"I expletive hope he expletive chokes on those expletive pretzels."Expletive meaning "curse word" :"Every other word that he says is an expletive.""It is easier to use an expletive than to think of an appropriate word.""Naming your dog after an expletive and yelling it in public is not a good idea."Also(for the meaning, added merely to fill out a sentence or line, or give emphasis)"The speech was padded with expletive remarks and comments."(given the popular connotation, the other meaning for the term is rarely used)
When a sentence begins with "there is" or "there are" it is called an expletive sentence.The word "there" is not a pronoun with an antecedent, and the subject of the sentence is considered the noun following the linking verb, as occurs with interrrogatives (e.g. who is the king?). The singular or plural verb (is, are) will agree with the later subject.Examples:"There is some disagreement over this point." (subject is disagreement)"There are often confusing rules in English grammar." (subject is rules)
This is likely the incomplete spelling of the word explanation.
"Every other word that he says is an expletive." "It is easier to use an expletive than to think of an appropriate word." "Naming your dog after an expletive and yelling it in public is not a good idea."
An expletive is a swear word. Think of your own examples.
doucement means softly or whoa
"Whoa," the rancher told his horse.The word 'whoa' has a silent 'a'.
Euphemistically commenting:"I expletive hope he expletive chokes on those expletive pretzels."Expletive meaning "curse word" :"Every other word that he says is an expletive.""It is easier to use an expletive than to think of an appropriate word.""Naming your dog after an expletive and yelling it in public is not a good idea."Also(for the meaning, added merely to fill out a sentence or line, or give emphasis)"The speech was padded with expletive remarks and comments."(given the popular connotation, the other meaning for the term is rarely used)
Yes. Whoa is a legal Scrabble word.
Stop playing that *expletive* game, you *expletive* nine year old. Oh wait, you don't know what that word means because you're *expletive* NINE YEARS OLD!
No, but some people will use it as an expletive instead of a bad word.
As an expletive and a vulgar way to say sexual intercourse.
The word "whoa" is typically classified as an interjection. It is often used to express surprise, disbelief, or a sudden halt or pause.
When a sentence begins with "there is" or "there are" it is called an expletive sentence.The word "there" is not a pronoun with an antecedent, and the subject of the sentence is considered the noun following the linking verb, as occurs with interrrogatives (e.g. who is the king?). The singular or plural verb (is, are) will agree with the later subject.Examples:"There is some disagreement over this point." (subject is disagreement)"There are often confusing rules in English grammar." (subject is rules)
This is likely the incomplete spelling of the word explanation.