by hundreds of other faith
I use "faith" in its religious context. What I hear when you said it like you did, is not "faith" but actually "tastes", which I find is a big difference. You know what I mean?
by hundreds of other faith
I use "faith" in its religious context. What I hear when you said it like you did, is not "faith" but actually "tastes", which I find is a big difference. You know what I mean?
While I know what you mean, I would not categorize such traditions as matters of taste, or preference, as they are fundamental cultural traditions where they are endemic as much as those cultural traditions endemic to our own youths. Many words have several meanings, faith, run, taste, and etc., which I suspect is not only true of English, but of every language. Much literature depends on such meanings, poetry, double entendres, and puns couldn't exist without them.