Apparently “nowdays” isn’t a word.
Quite often seen with spaces or hyphens.
As an aside I saw 'check, mate' today.
In Australia, this means putting your friend into check.
Or asking for the bill at a restaurant where you're friends with the waiter (though if I was going to be anal, afaik we spell it 'cheque' in the UK / Australia where people use 'mate')
That seems fine to me. I've heard "check and mate" a bunch, so this isn't too much of a stretch for me.
They clearly meant checkmate though.
Well OP clearly meant nowadays whenever they said "nowdays", too.
So do the people who say "check and mate."
Quite often seen with spaces or hyphens.
As an aside I saw 'check, mate' today.
In Australia, this means putting your friend into check.
Or asking for the bill at a restaurant where you're friends with the waiter (though if I was going to be anal, afaik we spell it 'cheque' in the UK / Australia where people use 'mate')
That seems fine to me. I've heard "check and mate" a bunch, so this isn't too much of a stretch for me.
They clearly meant checkmate though.
Well OP clearly meant nowadays whenever they said "nowdays", too.
So do the people who say "check and mate."