9M Followers, 8 Following, 1,016 Posts - KATSEYE (@katseyeworld) on Instagram: "PINKY UP out now welcome to KATSEYE world ๐"
5M Followers, 18 Following, 3 Posts - Just An Egg ๐ฅ (@world_record_egg) on Instagram: "Partnerships: eggshell@justanegg.com"
2M Followers, 1,592 Following, 12K Posts - World Aquatics (@world_aquatics) on Instagram: "Official home of Aquatic Sports! #UnitedByWater"
71K Followers, 376 Following, 2,388 Posts - World Long Drive (@worldlongdrive) on Instagram: "Golf at Full Throttle. Home of the longest hitters on the planet."
736K Followers, 11 Following, 105 Posts - World (@world) on Instagram: "In the age of AI, join the real human network."
Swimming World: World Champs Profile: Li Bingjie Brings Distance Talent to the Pool
Leading into the start of the World Championships later this month, Swimming World will publish a handful of short profiles on top contenders for the podium in Singapore. Our next entry in this series ...
Follow live FIFA World Cup 2026 group updates with full details on how teams qualify for the knockout stage and tie-breaker rules.
Why is citizen used to describe an inhabitant of a country when the word is derived from the Latin for city (civitas) and originally meant a city dweller? Wouldnโt the nouns derived from โcountry...
etymology - Why is the inhabitant of a country called a โcitizen ...
A citizen of the United States is a legal resident who has been processed by the government as being a member of the United States. A denizen of the United States is simply someone that lives there.
28 There is a suffix that is written only as -ize in American English and often -ise in British English (but not always, as ShreevatsaR points out in the comments). This suffix attaches to a large number of words, thus the s/z alternation shows up in a large number of words. Citizen does not have the -ize/-ise suffix.