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  1. Feb 13, 2019 · Repeat that please. - a polite formula used when one has not heard or understood what has been said. Note that the usage is simultaneously informal AND polite. But it's very much a declining usage - as implied by the ELU question About the usage of term 'come again', where apparently because some people (particularly, younger Americans, I think ...

  2. Nov 14, 2010 · 3. "Come again" is a slang, shorthand for "say again" or "could you say that again", of a longer form and more polite, "could you repeat what you just said, please?" People who do not know American slang very well say things like: "Could you come again, please", which is wrong, because you are mixing formal politeness with a curt, abrupt slang ...

  3. Come again? Say that again, please; Share. Improve this answer. Follow answered Sep 20, 2010 at 7:25. Dia ...

  4. Jan 25, 2014 · @AshStuart thanks. But pardon could, at least I think, be interpreted as me being offended what he says, I guess the same goes for come again, as my colleague wanted to point out. But at least, I think, the come again includes the request to repeat, vs the pardon being kind of passive.

  5. Aug 22, 2011 · Don't draw attention to the fact that this may be a "repeated request" or use words like "remind," "still," or "again" since that can sound like you're scolding. And using a question gives the benefit of a doubt that the person is (probably) very busy, they need to prioritize, the request just got buried under other work, and they may not understand the urgency or the importance of the matter ...

  6. Sep 10, 2017 · There should not be a comma between a verb and its adverb, regardless of whether it's at the end of the sentence or not. Here are some more examples: Please come again. I will do it again. Trying again was not a good idea. In "What is the definition of irony, again?", the word again is modifying the independent clause "what is the definition of ...

  7. Feb 4, 2022 · The next usage is: " Come to see us again." This expressly links the "seeing" as the purpose of the "coming." Any other possible purpose or result is irrelevant to the expression. If there are other possible purposes, they are secondary to this main purpose. Because this statement is quite precise, speakers often prefer to use the slightly ...

  8. Feb 7, 2015 · And the same dictionary lists cum only as a noun, labeling it a "variant of come", suggesting that "come" may be the more standard or common term: n. Vulgar Slang Variant of come. With the last line above apparently linking to come in the noun sense, meaning semen. TFD's Thesaurus lists both come and cum as nouns, e.g.: Noun 1.

  9. Aug 27, 2015 · PG&E, the utility that provides electricity in the San Francisco Bay Area, always announces after a blackout that "Service has been restored to the affected areas." But users usually say something along the lines of "Power's back on" or "The electricity is working again." –

  10. Aug 13, 2019 · Unique means ‘singular, or only happening once.’. It is from the word one - etymology - ‘early 17th century: from French, from Latin unicus, from unus ‘one’.’. A unique event. One that happens only once. Unique has also been broadened to mean ‘unusual or rare’ but then, things that only happen once, generally are that.