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  1. Nov 20, 2015 · Cahoot \Ca-hoot"\, n. [Perhaps fr. f. cohorte a company or band.] Partnership; league; as, to go in cahoot (or in cahoots) with a person. Usually used in the plural, and in modern usage often used to imply that the joint effort is unethical, shady, questionable, or illegal; as, a shill in cahoots with a pickpocket, to serve as a distraction.

  2. Jul 25, 2016 · Cahoots only occurs in the phrase in cahoots (with), just like the nouns collaboration, company, and association do -- except other nouns can occur with or without prepositions, in many roles. Cahoots, like bucket in kick the bucket, is simply frozen. Knowing that it seems like a noun is of no utility whatever when dealing with an idiom, since ...

  3. Sep 28, 2021 · Collude is an activity verb and usually takes the transitivizing preposition with, while cahoots is a noun appearing only in the idiom be in cahoots with, meaning 'colluding with'. Aside from those differences, collude is in a higher register than cahoots. Also, being in cahoots with somebody is a relatively permanent relation, while collusion ...

  4. Jan 27, 2015 · If the plural of "whereabouts" is "whereabouts", it's perfectly grammatical. Consider "His itinerary is unknown" vs. "Their itineraries are unknown." And the dictionary says "whereabouts" is singular or plural (so "His whereabouts are ..." would be grammatical, too). When you get that one figured out, see whether you can determine if cahoots is ...

  5. May 15, 2015 · Kith originally meant your native land. So kith and kin was "country and relatives". The idea behind the phrase was that country is more important than family. This sentiment promoted patriotism and people were motivated to leave their families and serve their countries. Later, kith evolved to mean your society, or your friends and relatives.

  6. Oct 3, 2010 · If it ain’t broke . . .. “Neither” means “not either.” Don’t throw in another negative! And don’t coattail “not” onto a previous negative. Example: “I am not going to drive you to school, nor will I pick you up.” This sentence is putting “nor” into cahoots with “not.” Can you say double negative?

  7. Sep 10, 2015 · We can take the noun "can" and form an unlimited number of coherent and sensible noun phrases, including: a big can, a blue can, a heavy can, an empty can, a tin can, a coffee can, an oil can, a trash can.

  8. Show 1 more comment. The character or quality derived from birth or native constitution; natural disposition, nature. Character as determining the class to which a thing belongs (cf. sense 13); generic or specific nature or quality; esp. in phr. in kind. A race, or a natural group of animals or plants having a common origin.

  9. May 29, 2011 · Early 'druthers' in New England. I ran a Google Books search for early instances of "druthers" and found, in addition to the 1868 instance from Our Boys and Girls mentioned in mgkrebbs's answer, this one from Benjamin Shillaber, "Mrs. Partington Grows Desultory," in Knitting-Work: A Web of Many Textures (1859):

  10. Nov 29, 2012 · Nov 28, 2012 at 20:17. @user: if something functions as a noun, it can be replaced with another noun. For example, in the previous sentence, if you think "functions" is a noun, you should be able to replace it with, say, "children" and have the result still be grammatical. But you can't, thus it's not a noun.