Word Confusion: Cay vs Key vs Quay
A quay is a man-built structure to aid in loading and unloading a ship while a cay is a key, which is an island in this Word Confusion from KD Did It.
A quay is a man-built structure to aid in loading and unloading a ship while a cay is a key, which is an island in this Word Confusion from KD Did It.
I received this book for free from in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review.Choicesby Mercedes Lackey fantasy in a Kindle edition that was published by DAW Books on November 27, 2018 and has 400 pages.Explore it on Goodreads or Amazon Other books by this author which I have reviewed include Unnatural Issue, “The River’s Gift”, Finding the Way and Other Tales of Valdemar, Foundation, Intrigues, Gwenhwyfar: The White Spirit, Owlknight, Charmed Destinies, Changes, Beauty and the Werewolf, Invasion, Home From the Sea, Dead Reckoning, Conspiracies, Bedlam’s Edge, Crown of Vengeance, Redoubt, Harvest Moon, World Divided, Elemental Magic: All New Tales of the Elemental Masters, Sacrifices, Steadfast, Burdens of the Dead, Bastion, Victories, Blood Red, The House of the Four Winds, Games Creatures Play, Closer to Home, Born to Run, Wheels of Fire, When the Bough Breaks, Chrome Circle, Changing the World: All-New Tales of Valdemar, Under the Vale and Other Tales of Valdemar, Arcanum 101, A Tangled Web, Winter Moon, Moving Targets and Other Tales of Valdemar, Elementary: All-New Tales of the Elemental Masters, No True Way: All-New Tales of Valdemar, From a High Tower, Hunter, […]
Amid and among are prepositions that mean the same thing BUT amid (or amidst) is used with uncountable nouns and among (or amongst) is used with countable nouns in this Word Confusion from KD Did It.
It’s five days out of time on a riverboat, exactly what Troy Alleyn needs until she meets the passengers and one of them disappears.
You’ll probably quake with fear in a quake. You might even quack about it in this Word Confusion from KD Did It.
A park bench unexpectedly took Elizabeth Smith, a starving writer, into her dreams of romance, into 1311 Scotland where she would turn Jamie MacLeod’s ordered world upside-down.
Two corpses at two different house showings — and all that math! — discourages Aurora “Roe” Teagarden about becoming a real estate agent. It’s obvious that there is a very cool killer at large in Lawrenceton, one who knows a great deal about real estate — and maybe too much about Roe.
I sometimes need to be covert about converting flour, sugar, and chocolate chips into cookies in my house in this Word Confusion from KD Did It.
Someone is making Sinclair out to be the bad guy what with the sabotage and his being a necromancer. The question is, can Jayne, Winter elf, Jack Frost’s daughter, Santa Claus’s niece, heir to the Winter Throne and now . . . private investigator, chill the rumors that threaten the royal family and keep Sinclair from being permanently iced?
Lain is a past participle meaning to lie prone while a lane is a narrow bit of road in this Word Confusion from KD Did It.