
"Please let me know." - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
Apr 6, 2011 · Why would you have a problem with this? Please let me know as soon as you figure it out.
word usage - Let's go hike/hiking at the park - English Language ...
A native speaker would say neither, because in this context the preposition needed is not at but in. Your sentence would normally occur as Let’s go for a hike in the park. However, in the UK at least, parks, …
grammar - The meaning of Let us not or Do not let us - English …
Aug 21, 2020 · Do not let us watch the movie. I think both a and b are correct and have the same meaning: one is How about we don't watch the movie? (suggestion) and the other is You shouldn't …
What is the rule for adjective order?
Aug 17, 2010 · @mcfedr: This is an English-language site, thus this question is limited to English. All languages do have rules for word order. Not necessarily remotely similar to the rules of English, but …
grammar - "Let's you and I/me be fair with each other." - English ...
Jan 27, 2015 · Given that Let's is a contraction of Let us, if you want to be redundant and expand upon just who the (contracted) "us" consists of, then since "us" is the objective case, the people included …
What is the meaning of the expression "We can table this"?
Mar 14, 2011 · Do you want the "correct" answer, or an interpretation of what the person meant? "Tabling" is improper to do via email, so this usage was very informal.
Which is grammatically correct: "Let he who..." or "Let him who..."
Sep 16, 2011 · Let he who believes in this prophet speak now what he knows. Let him who believes in this prophet speak now what he knows.
"Let alone" phrase - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
Apr 13, 2016 · The let alone construction has been analyzed in great and precise detail in a famous paper by Fillmore, Kay, and O'Connor: " Regularity and Idiomaticity in Grammatical Constructions: …
I'll tell you what let's do - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
May 19, 2021 · There's a relatively common saying, used by at least some speakers of modern English: I'll tell you what let's do. What meaning of let's is used here and what is happening grammatically? It …
Origin of the saying "let go or be dragged"
Oct 19, 2025 · Let go or be dragged. This is a saying often associated with Zen Buddhism (occasionally Stoicism). As far as I can tell, there's no historical connection, and it might well be originally English. ...