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Merriam-Webster lists 7 adjective forms, 2 adverb forms, 3 noun forms, and 3 verb forms. That's definitely a lot of definitions for a word.
64 1 ReplyEnglish is a fine language
52 0 ReplyYou say that, but I think it's rather thick
15 0 ReplyThick like sexual?
"Damn English you thicker than a bowl of oatmeal" thick?
6 0 ReplyI'm trying to be a comprehensible language but my definitions are dummy thicc and keep making things convoluted
3 0 ReplyThat's "thicc."
1 0 Reply
Try get, put, run, or go. Those in my second language I'm constantly translating wrong because of how many different definition for those words there are. 'Put' has to be over 100 different definitions.
19 0 ReplyAccording to QI, "set" has the most definitions
10 0 ReplyOnce you set up this set of objects on the set, we'll be all set for the Set festival and the band can play its set.
13 0 Reply*its
5 0 ReplyYou were really set on correcting him
6 0 ReplyIt's been a pet peeve of mine that autocorrect defaults "its" to "it's." Someone should change its programming.
5 0 ReplyOr at least something you could set.
5 0 Reply
You've seen nothing yet: https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/set
2 0 Reply