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50

  • Asked on December 24, 2021 in Grammar.

    What do I mean by gender inequality?

    In this sentence structure, unequal treatment or perception, must be treated as if it is saying unequal treatment or unequal perceptions.

    The equality of women and men is a prepositional phrase that modifies both unequal treatment and unequal perceptions.

    Is gender inequality necessarily related to gender equity?

    Does something happened spontaneously? When people act selfish, they are acting to be noticed and only they know they are doing it to others. This is not automatically implied or taken for granted or no one can see it. Why does the implicit Doer of it have to have to be mentioned when you insert their name into the action? No matter what the name is, the doer can be someone, anyone, people, any ‘other’.

    Gender Inequality refers to someone’s unequal treatment of individuals based on their gender, or anyone’s unequal perceptions of individuals based on their gender.

    If this doesn’t clear up the confusion please feel free to ask me any questions in the comment section.

    • 261704 views
    • 11 answers
    • 97485 votes
  • Asked on December 22, 2021 in Grammar.

    Songs take liberties; there are no rules to govern word usage except that it makes sense to the composer of the song.

    “The extra I” is used on the personal nature of the testimony, as well as showing the word needed to rhyme with testify and the extra syllable to keep the meter intact.

    Oh Moun’ / tains of Mak’ / kah Bear wit’ / ness that I’ /
    To the one’ / ness of Al’ / lah do I’ / tes ti fy

    etc.

    • 268193 views
    • 4 answers
    • 98437 votes
  • Asked on December 22, 2021 in Grammar.

    Songs take liberties; there are no rules to govern word usage except that it makes sense to the composer of the song.

    “The extra I” is used on the personal nature of the testimony, as well as showing the word needed to rhyme with testify and the extra syllable to keep the meter intact.

    Oh Moun’ / tains of Mak’ / kah Bear wit’ / ness that I’ /
    To the one’ / ness of Al’ / lah do I’ / tes ti fy

    etc.

    • 268193 views
    • 4 answers
    • 98437 votes
  • Asked on December 22, 2021 in Grammar.

    The last time I saw you was in an ages ago. It made your choices clearer.

    In AmE, we usually say, It’s been ages! Why: it has been ages or I haven’t seen you in ages.

    When was the last time someone saw you? Saw is past tense. Is it done? Has been is the present perfect progressive tense and describes an action that began in the past, continues in the present, and may continue. Imaran and Daft basically don’thing without some other construction.

    I saw you a year ago, but it has been around ages since then. What are some examples? The tenses in a

    sentence are the same.

    • 268037 views
    • 2 answers
    • 98640 votes
  • Asked on December 22, 2021 in Grammar.

    The last time I saw you was in an ages ago. It made your choices clearer.

    In AmE, we usually say, It’s been ages! Why: it has been ages or I haven’t seen you in ages.

    When was the last time someone saw you? Saw is past tense. Is it done? Has been is the present perfect progressive tense and describes an action that began in the past, continues in the present, and may continue. Imaran and Daft basically don’thing without some other construction.

    I saw you a year ago, but it has been around ages since then. What are some examples? The tenses in a

    sentence are the same.

    • 268037 views
    • 2 answers
    • 98640 votes
  • Asked on December 21, 2021 in Grammar.

    Songs take liberties; there are no rules to govern word usage except that it makes sense to the composer of the song.

    “The extra I” is used on the personal nature of the testimony, as well as showing the word needed to rhyme with testify and the extra syllable to keep the meter intact.

    Oh Moun’ / tains of Mak’ / kah Bear wit’ / ness that I’ /
    To the one’ / ness of Al’ / lah do I’ / tes ti fy

    etc.

    • 268193 views
    • 4 answers
    • 98437 votes
  • Asked on December 20, 2021 in Meaning.

    William Frey used the term barbell economy in his lecture in 2002 to describe what’s happening to wealth in the US. As classes, the very rich and the very poor

    are growing at either end of the spectrum, with an ever-dimining middle class between these extremes. As a long-time demographer dealing with class, he warns that for economic stability, we need a growing, not a shrinking middle class.

    As a dictionary, the word job market has been used to describe industry polarities (increasingly polarizing into a low income job and high income jobs, with a loss of middle-income jobs), the retail market (where the high-end retailers perform well, the low-end retailers perform well, and the middle

    market struggles) and other polarities.

    • 270222 views
    • 2 answers
    • 100733 votes
  • Asked on July 5, 2021 in Word choice.

    I don’t want to malcharacterize rich people,but a common slang phrase for going somewhere of inferior “quality” is slumming it: to endure

    conditions or accommodations that are worse than what one is accustomed to; to visit or frequent a place, esp. an amusement spot, considered low in social status. – TFD,

    TFD A – TFD A – TFD A – TFD B – TFD C – TFD D

    • 471060 views
    • 5 answers
    • 173546 votes
  • Asked on July 5, 2021 in Word choice.

    I don’t want to malcharacterize rich people,but a common slang phrase for going somewhere of inferior “quality” is slumming it: to endure

    conditions or accommodations that are worse than what one is accustomed to; to visit or frequent a place, esp. an amusement spot, considered low in social status. – TFD,

    TFD A – TFD A – TFD A – TFD B – TFD C – TFD D

    • 471060 views
    • 5 answers
    • 173546 votes
  • Asked on July 1, 2021 in Word choice.

    I don’t want to malcharacterize rich people,but a common slang phrase for going somewhere of inferior “quality” is slumming it: to endure

    conditions or accommodations that are worse than what one is accustomed to; to visit or frequent a place, esp. an amusement spot, considered low in social status. – TFD,

    TFD A – TFD A – TFD A – TFD B – TFD C – TFD D

    • 471060 views
    • 5 answers
    • 173546 votes