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  2. The "rule of thumb" was possibly conjured to suppress nefarious abuse of the law. This rule has never been documented, as it is merely a guideline, to help prevent serious injury. An example rule of thumb is: "Slice a peach along its suture, to remove the pit." There's no harm in bisecting the fruit along any other geodesic.

  3. expressions - Alternative term/phrase to 'Rule of thumb'? -...

    english.stackexchange.com/.../518969/alternative-term-phrase-to-rule-of-thumb

    Rule of Thumb: A practical and approximate way of doing or measuring something: A good rule of thumb is that a portion of rice is two handfuls. Cambridge. I would suggest using the word 'approximation', instead. "A good approximation is that a portion of rice is two handfuls." Approximation: a guess of a number that is not exact but that is ...

  4. When to spell out numbers - English Language & Usage Stack...

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/13537

    Based on my previous question regarding spelling out monetary amounts, is there a rule of thumb when a number should be spelled out? These examples are easy: I have two brothers. It's exactly 823 miles to New York. But do I have 15 minutes of fame, or fifteen minutes of fame?

  5. I always mess up with my writing by adding commas and full stops (periods) in the wrong places. Is there any rule of thumb or some other way that I can follow to avoid this problem?

  6. rule of thumb for 'however' in the middle of the sentence?

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/59594

    Nothing wrong with a however in the middle of a sentence. You often see a semi-colon in front of the comma, however, instead of a comma, particularly if the second half of the sentence could stand on its own as a complete sentence:

  7. As an additional rule of thumb, almost of all the exceptions for the consonant + o + s = es rule seem to involve plural nouns where there is no homophonous verb, as per CGEL, p. 1580. For class [ii], it might be useful to use Google Books Ngram Viewer to assess the · s /· es distribution, and to go with the ending that seems to be preferred ...

  8. The rule that Peter pointed out in comments is that it is voiced only in function words, not in others. (In fact, this is more of a law than a rule really, because it has no exception in English.) The complete list, excluding derived terms based on words in this list, is:

  9. suffixes - Is there some useful rule of thumb to distinguish...

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/604724/is-there-some-useful-rule-of-thumb...

    Etymonline gives a detailed history of suffix -ence.-ense is actually not a suffix the way -ence/ance is.. word-forming element attached to verbs to form abstract nouns of process or fact (convergence from converge), or of state or quality (absence from absent); ultimately from Latin -antia and -entia, which depended on the vowel in the stem word, from PIE *-nt-, adjectival suffix.

  10. Rule of thumb for hyphenation when justifying text? [duplicate]

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/589507

    I was wondering if there is a rule of thumb for how words should be hyphenated? The software I am using (Adobe InDesign) is hyphenating words like so: 'knowl-edge', 'cir-culation' and 'dif-ferent' However, my client is saying this should be: 'know-ledge', 'circ-ulation' and 'diff-erent'

  11. Rules of thumb on using the correct tense forms and auxiliary...

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/130808

    Some rules of thumb about the past. Past event dated, considered as rather short, completely accomplished: ...