Up until now, in C# we allow references to be null, but we also allow them to be dereferenced without checks. This leads to what is by far the most common exception
https://www.smart-words.org/quotes-sayings/english-idioms-commonly-used.pdf
https://www.dailywritingtips.com/best-apps-to-learn-english/
https://www.dailywritingtips.com/70-dialogue-writing-prompts/
https://www.dailywritingtips.com/26-feel-good-words/
https://www.dailywritingtips.com/list-50-compliments/
https://www.dailywritingtips.com/30-sports-idioms/
https://www.dailywritingtips.com/how-the-three-types-of-conjunctions-connect-ideas/
https://www.smart-words.org/quotes-sayings/english-idioms-commonly-used.pdf
Resistance to change will only hamper the company’s growth and success, likely resulting in other changes such as restructuring and layoffs.
The agency is still considering allowing users to voluntarily self-declare to designated authorities.
The practitioner should obtain the patient’s written permission before forwarding health records that contain sensitive information.
https://www.dailywritingtips.com/best-apps-to-learn-english/
https://www.dailywritingtips.com/70-dialogue-writing-prompts/
- unless I’m telling someone they’re cute or beautiful.)
- hunky-dory – Used lightly, not necessarily ironically, but not seriously. Rarely used in a leader’s speech to the nation in troubled times. First appeared in print in America in 1866, and popularized by a Christy Minstrel song from which I will not quote. The word may have Dutch origins via New York City, originally a Dutch colony, perhaps from hunkey meaning “okay” (1861), which has roots in the Middle Dutch word honc: “hiding place.” The word survives in the practice of “hunkering,” which was the center of a 1959 fad, and later “hunker down” (1965), something meteorologists encourage their listeners to do during a snowstorm. An 19th century children’s Bible song about Noah and his ark says, “This is the end of my story, everything is hunky dory.” (It sounds like something a hipster mammal would say in Finding Dory.) Our professor friend says this word belongs to her mom’s generation.
- nifty – This dated word has the meaning of spiffy, fashionable or clever: “You found a nifty solution to that problem.” It was first used in the 1860s, such as in an 1865 poem by American Western writer Bret Harte, The Tale of a Pony, describing a fancy horse-drawn carriage:
- dandy – Good-looking, fashionable. First used before 1800, the Merriam-Webster Dictionary says it was probably short for jack-a-dandy. By the later 1800s, a dandy was a man who cared too much about his looks, always wanted to be seen in the latest fashions, and perhaps wasn’t known for anything else. Like other outdated words, it is often used sarcastically. Though if someone asks you how you are doing, you can say, “Fine and dandy” without sounding facetious. (I like the way an older friend says, ‘Isn’t that dandy? You got a bike for your 13th birthday.’)
https://www.dailywritingtips.com/26-feel-good-words/
https://www.dailywritingtips.com/list-50-compliments/
https://www.dailywritingtips.com/30-sports-idioms/
https://www.dailywritingtips.com/how-the-three-types-of-conjunctions-connect-ideas/
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