What's the difference between 'single-hand' and 'single-handed'? And why? Is meaning of 'single-hand' a subset of 'single-handed'?
Learn English – What’s the difference between ‘single-hand’ and ‘single-handed’
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In a 5 December 2004 NYT column, William Safire commented on the wriggle room vs wiggle room controversy, and wrote that “wiggle room predominates in current usage by more than 14 to 1”. The ratio appears to be still about 14 to 1, nine years later. (Google shows 2,080,000 and 147,000 results at the moment on my computer, a ratio of 14.15 to 1.)
Safire discussed wiggle room in a column in the early 1980's. In his 2004 column, he remarked:
To wiggle is to move from side to side, or to and fro; from this we get wiggle room, defined in this space 20 years ago as ‘’an implicit opportunity for later flexibility . . . not quite an ‘escape hatch’ or a ‘way out.’’’
For these two decades, wiggle room has been continually challenged by wriggle room, which has the advantage of alliteration. However, wriggle (from Old English wrigian, root of awry) means ‘’to squirm, writhe, move sinuously,’’ as distinct from wiggle, which denotes back-and-forth motion, not necessarily twisting.
I’m not knocking wriggle, which -- when followed by out in diplomatic parlance -- vividly calls up the picture of sneaky evasion by artifice. But when paired with room, wriggle has not succeeded in dislodging the more limited, precise and less pejorative wiggle.
Note that ngrams for wiggle room,wriggle room shows instances of wiggle room occurring in the 1890's, and wriggle room not appearing until the 1960's. The ngrams shown in the question, with its 1945 starting date, is misleading with respect to dates of first usage.
A 2011 thread in the Eggcorn Forum quoted from Safire's 2004 column, and went on to point out:
“Wiggle room” was used in the 1930s in a non-figurative sense (“plenty of wiggle-room for your toes”) and as early as 1946 in a figurative sense (“The policy wiggle-room for local decisionmakers is remarkably small.”). “Wriggle room” follows the same metaphorical arc, but traverses it later than “wiggle room,” with the figurative sense not detectable in print until the 1960s. But “later” does not always mean “derived from.” Whether “wriggle room” arose independently or whether it was an eggcornical corruption of “wiggle room” is anyone’s guess.
... “Wriggle” and “wiggle” are not historical cognates – they are frequentatives of two independent Teutonic verbs. The meanings of “wriggle” and “wiggle” have a lot of overlap, but there are differences: “wriggle” hints at a random motion, often one with some writhe or twist to it, while “wiggle” points the listener toward a more two-dimensional back-and-forth movement.
While “wriggle room” is a debatable eggcorn, a switch in the opposite direction (“wriggle >> wiggle”) is a better eggcorn candidate. The idiom “wriggle out of,” meaning to contrive to avoid something, came into common use in the mid-1800s and peaked in popularity during the 1920s. About the time it peaked, the phrase “wiggle out of” began to be used in the same sense. It is possible that the post-1920 decline of “wriggle out of” represents, in part at least, its replacement by “wiggle out of.” If “wiggle out of” is an eggcorn, it is a highly successful one: the COCA database suggests that the metaphorical uses of “wriggle out of” and “wiggle out of” have appeared in print with about the same frequency over the last decade.
A 2004 straightdope.com thread suggests, and I think refutes, a “pondian” difference in usage (ie, British English versus American). Among other items it includes a chart based on counts of web pages containing instances of color or colour along with wiggle room or wriggle room. If colour is a good indicator of BE usage, then the ratio of wiggle room over wriggle room is similar in both BE and AE:
| color | colour
-------------+-------------------
wiggle room | 7,080 | 6,940
-------------+---------+---------
wriggle room | 177 | 156
Nausea, by itself, is the urge to vomit.
I had really bad nausea.
Nauseated is the verb meaning to become affected with nausea.
I felt really nauseated all of a sudden.
Nauseating is the quality of inflicting nausea on someone.
Man, that smell was really nauseating.
Nauseous is the weird one, which can mean either 'nauseated' or 'nauseating'. Some folks definitely believe that its only proper use is 'nauseating', but Merriam Webster's usage notes disagree:
Those who insist that nauseous can properly be used only in sense 1 ["causing nausea or disgust : NAUSEATING"] and that in sense 2 ["affected with nausea or disgust"] it is an error for nauseated are mistaken. Current evidence shows these facts: nauseous is most frequently used to mean physically affected with nausea, usu. after a linking verb such as feel or become; figurative use is quite a bit less frequent. Use of nauseous in sense 1 is much more often figurative than literal, and this use appears to be losing ground to nauseating. Nauseated is used more widely than nauseous in sense 2.
Best Answer
It is called the past participle.
For example,
The hyphen is optional. Read When to use a hyphen to coin a new word and when to omit a hyphen?.
The past participle, because the state of the object is due to a completed action.
There is difference between "red-haired woman" and "red hair woman".
Hyphens are for clarity:
Red hair woman = red-hair woman.
A hand is one cycle of a card game. A hand, can be used as the term for an employee or hired help.
sin·gle-hand·ed also sin·gle·han·ded (sĭng′gəl-hăn′dĭd)
adj.sin′gle-hand′ed·ness n.
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2011 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.