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Discover LudwigThe phrase "cuss of" is not grammatically correct and is not commonly used in written English
It is likely a slang or colloquial expression that is not considered formal enough for written communication. An example of its usage could be in a casual conversation between friends: Person 1: "Why did you leave the party early last night?" Person 2: "I had to cuss of my annoying coworker who wouldn't stop hitting on me."
Exact(5)
Generally, though, he's a clever cuss of a playmaker — see this nifty pass to Carter last night — and it's a pleasure to watch him overachieve deep into June, even in another uniform.
By coincidence, Cashman, in his bachelor days, had roomed with Tim Coughlin, the son of the Giants' coach, who had been prodded by his own wife and Giants management to stop being such a miserable cuss of a football coach.
Through a simple organic-acid-directed approach, in situ growth of iron carbon oxide nanoparticles (NPs) were assembled on the coordinatively unsaturated Cr sites (CUSs) of MIL-101 and inserted into its cavities orderly for the first time.
While showing Marsh the Cardiff Giant (or rather a copy of it), which he cheerfully admits is a fraud when Marsh points this out, he refers with irritation about a "little cuss" of a professor who outbid him for some Mexican antiquities.
No one (their brains included) is about to call them out on being "irrational," their perception of actualy reality is extended to include things they've thought or seen on TV, and if you get enough of a sputter going you can make even "Rancho Mirago" sound like the filthiest cuss of all time.
Similar(54)
The excerpt from Fox About Town, Mr Fox's newspaper column, contains a nice piece of foreshadowing: "I have never crossed paths with an English wolf, but pardon my French they scare the cuss out of me.
In contrast, Hamilton said in a 2008 interview, "We have an anecdote where, after spotting an injured Turk, he said 'I'll put that poor cuss out of his agony' and just shot him.
In some parts of the country, people say "tennis shoes" instead of "sneakers" and "cuss" instead of "curse".
The six races, about half an hour apart, did not evoke much noise from the crowd at the Meadowlands, aside from the occasional cussing out of a horse.
"Can we cuss inside of the article?" Ms. Legler replied: "Let's censor a little bit.
But will pre-teen viewers be receptive to the film's idiosyncratic look, or the use of "cuss" as a swear word, or the endless talk of "bandit hats"?
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com