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  1. vi. If no (a reasonable person would have cooled off), then no provocation defense. vii. If yes, did the defendant actually fail to cool off? viii. If no (the defendant did cool off), then no provocation defense. ix. If yes (the defendant did not cool off), was there a causal link between the provocation and the killing? And so was the second:

  2. Oct 17, 2006 · As No can easily be confused with the word "no", it's generally best to include the stop: "No." (even these days, when it's acceptable to write many abbreviations without stops). The disadvantage with that is that the stop tends to break the sentence, as the eye may see it initially as a full stop after the word "No".

  3. Mar 4, 2007 · As a matter of curiousity, no prob and no probs are almost equally common to Google. Searching UK only, no probs outnumbers no prob by about 3:1. It's not all that recent, either: 1934 W ODEHOUSE Thank you, Jeeves xi. 146 Quite a prob., I mean to say, and I was still brooding on it when the garden gate clicked and I perceived Jeeves walking up ...

  4. Apr 6, 2011 · "No issues" on its own sounds a little strange. "No problem" is almost too vague, as the expression can mean several things depending on the context. If it is a professional email, I think this would benefit from a verb, e.g. "No issues were encountered", since you say it relates to a specific subject. Hope that helps.

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  6. Aug 13, 2021 · It's not the kind of thing that is usually written. It sounds like spoken words. And in that case, there are no commas anyway. If I were writing instructions to someone, I wouldn't use "On no account". I would just write: - Under no circumstances should you tell anyone this secret.

  7. Dec 7, 2019 · Hello everyone, I'm perplexed about the actual meaning of the verb "brook" I will brook no criticism of my son. Some dictionaries define it as: To not accept or allow something. Marriom Webster's dictionary defines it as: To not stand..tolerate something. Which one is correct?

  8. Jan 17, 2015 · Logically there can only ever be one alternative, so the "other" in "There's no other alternative" is gramatically correct, but superfluous. If you want to use a plural, you could say: "There are no other options" or "choices".

  9. Nov 28, 2009 · I understand the expression ¨a poco,¨ but I hear a conversation that will go like this: Person A says something surprising. Person B says ¨a poco sí¨ then Person A, or possibly C (not sure) says ¨a poco no¨ in a joking way And then I don´t understand what ¨a poco¨ means in the way that...

  10. Mar 1, 2006 · The original phrase was "long time no see" and then people started to use "long time no hear" with reference to telephone calls, but I don't think I've ever heard anyone combine the two into "Long time, no hear and no see"!

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