Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Hands painting patterns on dried autumn leaves Whatever you're planning for your DIY outdoor fall decorations this year, here's a ... Who says fall decorating has to mean store-bought pumpkins and pricey wreaths?

Understanding the Context

This season, grab what's already around you and turn them into one-of-a-kind autumn accents. These DIY ideas are simple, ... Fall is a great time to bust out new decorations, but you don’t have to break the bank to make your house stand out. Making DIY fall decor is a great way to save money and help the environment at the ...

Key Insights

Well, "homemade" means "made at home" while "handmade" means made by hand, not by a machine. Many "homemade" items are also "handmade," because people who make things at home aren't factory owners and can't afford expensive machinery. Likewise, many "handmade" items are also "homemade." However, items that are best made, or that can only be made, by hand (without the use of machinery) can be ... homemade or home made or home-made Hello, I've found each of the spellings in the headline and I'm not sure if all of them are correct or there is one use more frequently than the others? I guess it would be 'homemade'.

Final Thoughts

Thanks for your replies. I've never seen "believe on" except in the KJV (Acts 16:31). I also have seen it on homemade billboards in rural Indiana and on bumper stickers like the one in #6, which refer to the same passage in the New Testament. I associate it with evangelical Christianity and particularly the US Midwest, because that's where I first saw it about 40 years ago. Surely the point about "spaghetti alla chitarra" is not only that it's homemade but that it is made by stretching the pasta over a board, then cut to resemble the strings of a guitar. An important question, I think, is is Mescher keeping some Italian as titles of the dishes on the menu then with translations underneath?

He likes homemade food—but I'm sure he he's not/hasn't had any since he moved into this apartment. He's not/he isn't going anywhere anytime soon, so we have plenty of time to think of a solution. Are the two options (left and right) interchangeable? Or they have different meanings/tones?