a worn out word is one that you use over and over again to where everyone already knows what your saying before you say it
From Yeat's poem Into the Twilight? Well most likely the phrase most troubling you is "Out-worn." Poetry often switches around sentence and even word structure to align it to meter. The phrase "Worn out" might make more sense than "Out-worn." However Yeats in this case chose it because "Out Worn" is an unstressed word followed by a stress, while switched around in the normal manner yields a stressed, unstressed pattern unwanted for this meter. A good way to understand meter is through "upbeats and downbeats" in music. For example: ONE two THREE four is an example of stressed followed by an unstressed beat. WORN out vs. out WORN.
The word "phraseology" has the root word "phrase" in it.
No. Say should have worn. Worn is the past participle.
The word "phrase" has one syllable.
Antonym
futhermore
Antonym
== ==
This rug is worn out, we need to replace it
Exhausted. Tired. Worn out. Worn. Weary.
The word that introduces a prepositional phrase is a preposition.
The word for the phrase "cannot be challenged" is indisputable.