herhandsmyhands, 4 months ago to romancelandia @romancelandia Brit friends, help? Would someone from a good family--not aristocracy, but perhaps landed gentry--refer to themselves as "a posh" when talking to someone else. As in, "I may be a posh from (place), but..." (please share for reach)
@romancelandia Brit friends, help? Would someone from a good family--not aristocracy, but perhaps landed gentry--refer to themselves as "a posh" when talking to someone else. As in, "I may be a posh from (place), but..."
(please share for reach)
herhandsmyhands, 1 month ago Help? In the book I'm reading, someone "extruded a smile". Is this a British expression? (setting is Devon) #Language #LanguageHelp @romancelandia @bookstodon
Help?
In the book I'm reading, someone "extruded a smile". Is this a British expression? (setting is Devon)
#Language #LanguageHelp
@romancelandia @bookstodon
herhandsmyhands, 5 months ago to books Language question for native English speakers: would anyone say, "my sorry for (person) grew"? It sounds and looks extremely weird to me, but English isn't my first language. Help? #LanguageHelp #Reading
Language question for native English speakers: would anyone say, "my sorry for (person) grew"?
It sounds and looks extremely weird to me, but English isn't my first language.
#LanguageHelp #Reading