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meaning - "At the moment" or "in the moment"? - English …
Dec 10, 2014 · "At the moment" means right now. For example, "He's asleep at the moment". "In the moment" means with a special focus on the present time. For example, "living in the moment" means paying special attention to what you're doing at that particular time, as opposed to looking back on the past or planning for the future.
a better way to express "an idea/thought suddenly came to me"
Dec 12, 2013 · A light bulb moment TFD. Informal a moment of sudden inspiration, revelation, or recognition [from the cartoon image of a light bulb lighting up above a character's head when he or she has an idea] Related to the concept of light providing an answer, is the noun. illumination "In a moment of illumination" TFD
"It was from that moment where" vs. "it was from that moment …
Jun 2, 2013 · That was the moment when I started to doubt him. I'm not sure if where or when would be incorrect grammatically speaking, but either would be confusingly redundant, as they serve essentially the same purpose as the prepositional phrase from that moment-- …
How do I use "as of now" correctly? - English Language & Usage …
Aug 31, 2014 · Think of ‘As of now’ being like - ‘stop! Freeze the moment!’ Take a photo! And tell you what’s going on. It also can mean that the speaker is telling you ‘the best that he knows - so far’ ie ‘as of’ or what is going on ‘now’. His or her own, ‘on the ground’ direct experience.
slang - Is the term "gotcha moment" familiar? - English Language ...
Sep 9, 2016 · By the time the plane landed, I had attained the 'Gotcha' moment that is the Nirvana of the vengeful reader. It took me only an hour to get a fax of the 'original article' (by Norman Podhoretz. in the New York Post a few weeks previously), compare the sentences word for word, and fire off an extremely contented and self-righteous letter to the ...
phrase requests - Looking for a word to describe a very specific ...
Jul 13, 2015 · A literal fit would be hindsight bias (wikipedia).. Hindsight bias, also known as the knew-it-all-along effect or creeping determinism, is the inclination, after an event has occurred, to see the event as having been predictable, despite there having been little or …
A word/phrase for an unexpected change or turn of events in a …
Mar 14, 2017 · a watershed event/moment The discovery of penicillin was a watershed in the history of medicine. The origin of its figurative usage appears to be from the geological term, where a ridge or other geological feature separates flowing water into different drainage systems.
What does 'gotcha' mean? - English Language & Usage Stack …
Jun 17, 2011 · Gotcha actually has several meanings. All of them can be derived from the phrase of which this is a phonetic spelling, namely "[I have] got you".
Term or phrase for a traumatic or life-changing event
Jan 6, 2013 · Although it's not used exclusively by psychologists and psychiatrists, a watershed moment is appropriate as well as most of the other suggestions made. If you do a Google search for watershed moment, you'll find psychological usages in many of the hits.
single word requests - What is the name of the moment when the ...
any moment of great or sudden revelation [via Church Latin from Greek epiphaneia an appearing, from epi- + phainein to show] i.e, an epiphany has two modes of operation — The party experiencing the epiphany; The parties observing the epiphany, hence the moment whereby the parties observe that epiphany.