Prefiling savings, Pre-filing (sic) savings

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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

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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.
Yahoo Bot
Posts: 22904
Joined: Sun Oct 18, 2020 11:38 pm


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.
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