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A person who prefers pleasures and activities that center around the home; stay-at-home. Random House. Share.
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"In a while" vs. "for a while" - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
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Informal word for someone who likes to keep to themselves
A person who prefers pleasures and activities that center around the home; stay-at-home. Random House. Share.
Asking somebody to select between two or more options
1 or 2 is fine (but use at home or even home rather than in home); 3 is not. (However, in informal speech, the instances of do are often dropped from 1 or 2.) For more than two options, the same applies: Do you want to stay home, come with me, or go to town? Do you want to stay home, do you want to come with me, or do you want to go to town?
grammaticality - "stay home" vs. "stay at home" - English Language ...
Collins has: stay-at-home countable noun: If you describe someone as a stay-at-home, you mean that they stay at home rather than going out to work or travelling. I've been using '[We'll] stay at home in case the post comes' etc for over 60 years; Collins also disagrees with your unsupported statement ('Home usually shouldn’t be used with at').
What is the origin of the phrase "'til the cows come home"?
The earliest form of the expression seems to have been "till the cow come home" from the late 1500s or early 1600s, with "till the cows come home" in use by 1738. The references I consulted agreed that the expression refers to cows coming back to the barn from the pasture either in the evening or in the morning, not to cows escaping the ...
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