Sake is the correct spelling. I will answer this for your sake.
(The same spelling is used for Japanese rice wine sake)
appearance's sakeIt's intended to mean something done for the purpose of appearance; another way of saying it is "the sake of appearance." So it becomes possessive, just like "For God's sake" or "For Pete's sake."The apostrophe is correct but the final s is optional. "Appearance' sake" is favoured by some authorities as the beginning 's' in 'sake' does for both words. I think it looks odd though.
The term "for land's sake" is believed to be a euphemistic expression that was used in place of saying "for the Lord's sake" or "for God's sake" in order to avoid using religious references in casual conversation. It has evolved over time to simply express surprise or frustration.
Tagalog translation of OLD TIME SAKE: sa ating pinagsamahan
Sake was speared on a speared because "Sake" and "Speared" are two different words that sound similar but have different meanings and spellings. The confusion between the two names likely stemmed from a typing error or misunderstanding.
The suffix of "spell" is " -el."
It is "sake" and the kanji for it is either 酒 or お酒 or 日本酒 (this one specifically means Japanese sake)
Are you really so stupid that you don't know how to spell "does" and "custom"? For Christ's sake, go back to school and learn to spell.
No, he's not dead, for Michael Jordan's sake. And you don't spell his name "Jordon," it's "Jordan."
No No, Stop.You , Good Sir , Cannot Spell Pregnant or Percent , on a site with an in built spell check.Always... Aways Use a Condom.For The Sake of Mankind.Goodbye.
As an abbreviation of sarcastic, it would be sarky. But that doesn't really matter as you'd never write that down where you'd be expected to spell it correctly.As for the Japanese rice beer, it is "Saki" or "Sake".
No. You can say "for the sake of myself" or "for my sake." "For my sake" sounds much better.
For Gods sake man, atleast spell your Questions correctly!
'Sake no okawari onegaishimasu'.
酒 is the Kanji for sake.
The duration of For Her Sake is 600.0 seconds.
For Pete's sake is a minced oath, instead of saying "for Christ's ( or possibly Pity's) sake."
Rice is used to make Sake.