Prefiling savings, Pre-filing (sic) savings
Sorry John, you are correct I left off an "m". Oxford publishes the English usage, if I recall, second. The English usages have more use of hyphens with prefixes. Strange that a thing to be affixed would be hyphenated by anyone, but the English have their own rules and spellings.
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On Aug 9, 2010, at 10:30 PM, John Faucher wrote:
The Oxford English Dictionary says either commingling or ng.
- John D. Faucher
On 8/9/10 9:18 PM, "Dennis McGoldrick" wrote:
separate property is not property of hubby's case. If money comes from mother-in-law and there has been no comingling (no hyphen) of the funds, it's separate property.
dennis
The post was migrated from Yahoo.
John, you are correct, there are two m's. However the
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On Aug 9, 2010, at 10:30 PM, John Faucher wrote:
The Oxford English Dictionary says either commingling or ng.
- John D. Faucher
On 8/9/10 9:18 PM, "Dennis McGoldrick" wrote:
separate property is not property of hubby's case. If money comes from mother-in-law and there has been no comingling (no hyphen) of the funds, it's separate property.
dennis
The post was migrated from Yahoo.