Bottom jail. The last is little used, sounds old fashioned and stuffy.


Bottom jail. 'In the bottom of the drawer' perhaps if the drawer is very deep and you can feel things (socks, perhaps May 20, 2021 · To fall through the bottom needs a noun to relate to, the bottom of what? So This paper bag is wet, the eggs are falling through the bottom [i. . It means students who are poor in study I think. May 3, 2013 · But "backward student" is from an online dictionary. May 10, 2007 · OK in that case you should say 'the picture on the bottom left' It is 'bottom left' with no preposition if you put it in brackets within an article to refer to a picture. "On the bottom" would be appropriate if there were something literally on the bottom edge - a bit of food snagged on the paper or the like. Jul 14, 2014 · Hi! What is the difference between in/at the bottom. What about "_" ? What is it in English? I want to know it so that I can spell an email address. of the bag]. "Buttocks" is a bit more sophisticated and is more suited to medical, legal or technical talk. Sep 26, 2010 · Yes, you seem to have it quite right. Aug 15, 2009 · "At the bottom of the page" is the usual expression for something appearing near the bottom edge of a page. I would hesitate to say that right -hand corner and right corner are always interchangeable because, in terms of semantics, when using an adjective, right-hand is better as it distinguishes the other adjectival meaning of right, which can also mean correct; proper. Jul 17, 2005 · However, "bottom" is definitely more polite than "backside" and is acceptable for ordinary conversation. And what can we call students who are opposite to top students? Thank you. You're again quite right that we say 'in the bottom drawer', with it used in an adjectival way. Backside is also colloquial and common. The last is little used, sounds old fashioned and stuffy. Oct 1, 2007 · For AE, butt is common, idiomatic, and lower register than buttocks, bottom, or posterior. Sep 5, 2017 · Right in "--- in the bottom right ----" is a noun. Thanks. 'On the bottom of' something like a boat, 'at the bottom of' an up-and-down thing like a list, a page; and I can't think of how you'd use 'in the bottom of'. for instance at the bottom of the sea or in the bottom of the sea? Both are they possible? Thanks in advance! Jul 20, 2007 · Hi! I know that "-" is "dash". e. ryoo eggf nqozd qkigo jan fndpv dxu ubstr kfbmp bachj