Daily Reporter Greenfield Indiana Obituary Section: Honoring Area Residents

The Daily Reporter: SNAP benefits don’t pay for rotisserie chicken. A bipartisan bill might change that

The Daily Reporter: Iran government says men’s soccer team is preparing for ‘proud participation’ at World Cup in US

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The Daily Reporter: Ex-Philippine president Duterte to face trial on crimes against humanity charges

The Daily Reporter: Samsung workers rally in South Korea, demanding higher pay and threatening to strike

The Daily Reporter: Russian oil to Slovakia resumes flowing through pipeline that crosses Ukraine

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The Daily Reporter: Residents in rural Sudan say the Iran war has made it harder to get medicines

The Daily Reporter: Stars and Wild go to 2nd overtime tied at 3 past midnight in Game 3 of even series

The Daily Reporter: Patriots coach Mike Vrabel is seeking counseling and will miss Day 3 of the NFL draft, report says

The Daily Reporter: Gilgeous-Alexander scores 37 as the Thunder beat the Suns to go up 2-0 in their 1st-round series

The Daily Reporter: Singer D4vd’s lawyers look to make evidence against him public in killing of 14-year-old girl

The Daily Reporter: Pistons pound the Magic in paint and meet them at the rim to end their long home playoff win drought

daily (adj.) Old English dæglic (see day). This form is known from compounds: twadæglic “happening once in two days,” þreodæglic “happening once in three days;” the more usual Old English word was dæghwamlic, also dægehwelc. Cognate with German täglich.

Why “daily” and not “dayly”? - English Language & Usage Stack ...

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"Hourly," "daily," "monthly," "weekly," and "yearly" suggest a consistent approach to creating adverbial forms of time measurements, but the form breaks down both in smaller time units ("secondly," "minutely"—perhaps because of the danger of confusion with other meanings of those words) and in larger ones ("decadely," "centurily ...

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