chasly from UK's Profile

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557

  • Asked on April 1, 2021 in Other.

    Avoid abbreviations such as “h”. E. and “e.g. What are some examples?

    What are the options for many? Was this 70 %? What are your eyes on the 20 % of people? Re: 1% of people? I don’t know who wrote the article. The word many indicates just a guess by the person who wrote the article. There have been rumors, but we can know from what I read.

    Maybe the writer has met one or two people that didn’t understand and has generalised to the whole population based on his/her own experience.

    How do I write an abbreviation and why do I never understand it? I see it that most of the time people don’t know what the meaning of the word abbreviation is.

    How educated do you think your readers are? Can anyone see, understand or help me with the abbreviations? Anyone who has good education does this.

    On the other hand, it doesn’t take a lot of effort to write things in full. If you never use the same expressions in a document you are working with

    multiple times (e.g. a statement, a paragraph, an expression in a document) unless of course you repeated use them in the same document.

    • 722179 views
    • 63 answers
    • 267406 votes
  • Asked on March 31, 2021 in Other.

    Avoid abbreviations such as “h”. E. and “e.g. What are some examples?

    What are the options for many? Was this 70 %? What are your eyes on the 20 % of people? Re: 1% of people? I don’t know who wrote the article. The word many indicates just a guess by the person who wrote the article. There have been rumors, but we can know from what I read.

    Maybe the writer has met one or two people that didn’t understand and has generalised to the whole population based on his/her own experience.

    How do I write an abbreviation and why do I never understand it? I see it that most of the time people don’t know what the meaning of the word abbreviation is.

    How educated do you think your readers are? Can anyone see, understand or help me with the abbreviations? Anyone who has good education does this.

    On the other hand, it doesn’t take a lot of effort to write things in full. If you never use the same expressions in a document you are working with

    multiple times (e.g. a statement, a paragraph, an expression in a document) unless of course you repeated use them in the same document.

    • 722179 views
    • 63 answers
    • 267406 votes
  • Asked on March 30, 2021 in Other.

    Avoid abbreviations such as “h”. E. and “e.g. What are some examples?

    What are the options for many? Was this 70 %? What are your eyes on the 20 % of people? Re: 1% of people? I don’t know who wrote the article. The word many indicates just a guess by the person who wrote the article. There have been rumors, but we can know from what I read.

    Maybe the writer has met one or two people that didn’t understand and has generalised to the whole population based on his/her own experience.

    How do I write an abbreviation and why do I never understand it? I see it that most of the time people don’t know what the meaning of the word abbreviation is.

    How educated do you think your readers are? Can anyone see, understand or help me with the abbreviations? Anyone who has good education does this.

    On the other hand, it doesn’t take a lot of effort to write things in full. If you never use the same expressions in a document you are working with

    multiple times (e.g. a statement, a paragraph, an expression in a document) unless of course you repeated use them in the same document.

    • 722179 views
    • 63 answers
    • 267406 votes
  • Is idiom general in that we can take action, or take an action?

    Most courts, however, have read the specific intent requirement to be satisfied in police excessive force cases if the defendant purposefully took an action which he or she knew or should have known violated the victim’s constitutional rights. Police Violence: Understanding and Controlling Police Abuse of Force by William A. Geller, Hans Toch

    For this use, definition 7.a. To undertake, make, or perform: to walk. Take a decision is perfectly fitting.

    Give a wee -> and perform a

    wee: take a wee and then perform a wee for 2 times.

    • 743521 views
    • 11 answers
    • 274028 votes
  • Asked on March 30, 2021 in Other.

    Avoid abbreviations such as “h”. E. and “e.g. What are some examples?

    What are the options for many? Was this 70 %? What are your eyes on the 20 % of people? Re: 1% of people? I don’t know who wrote the article. The word many indicates just a guess by the person who wrote the article. There have been rumors, but we can know from what I read.

    Maybe the writer has met one or two people that didn’t understand and has generalised to the whole population based on his/her own experience.

    How do I write an abbreviation and why do I never understand it? I see it that most of the time people don’t know what the meaning of the word abbreviation is.

    How educated do you think your readers are? Can anyone see, understand or help me with the abbreviations? Anyone who has good education does this.

    On the other hand, it doesn’t take a lot of effort to write things in full. If you never use the same expressions in a document you are working with

    multiple times (e.g. a statement, a paragraph, an expression in a document) unless of course you repeated use them in the same document.

    • 722179 views
    • 63 answers
    • 267406 votes
  • Is idiom general in that we can take action, or take an action?

    Most courts, however, have read the specific intent requirement to be satisfied in police excessive force cases if the defendant purposefully took an action which he or she knew or should have known violated the victim’s constitutional rights. Police Violence: Understanding and Controlling Police Abuse of Force by William A. Geller, Hans Toch

    For this use, definition 7.a. To undertake, make, or perform: to walk. Take a decision is perfectly fitting.

    Give a wee -> and perform a

    wee: take a wee and then perform a wee for 2 times.

    • 743521 views
    • 11 answers
    • 274028 votes
  • Asked on March 30, 2021 in Other.

    Avoid abbreviations such as “h”. E. and “e.g. What are some examples?

    What are the options for many? Was this 70 %? What are your eyes on the 20 % of people? Re: 1% of people? I don’t know who wrote the article. The word many indicates just a guess by the person who wrote the article. There have been rumors, but we can know from what I read.

    Maybe the writer has met one or two people that didn’t understand and has generalised to the whole population based on his/her own experience.

    How do I write an abbreviation and why do I never understand it? I see it that most of the time people don’t know what the meaning of the word abbreviation is.

    How educated do you think your readers are? Can anyone see, understand or help me with the abbreviations? Anyone who has good education does this.

    On the other hand, it doesn’t take a lot of effort to write things in full. If you never use the same expressions in a document you are working with

    multiple times (e.g. a statement, a paragraph, an expression in a document) unless of course you repeated use them in the same document.

    • 722179 views
    • 63 answers
    • 267406 votes
  • Why do you want to visit the park everyday so you can park for a few hours around there?

    What is the use of the form to suggest reluctance of the asker? If using the past/past ms there is a nuance that they hope is in the past.

    • 757507 views
    • 5 answers
    • 279237 votes
  • Are the French champions still in the game?

    Is the “recognized version” unused?

    Is there a rule to start with singular thing?

    He was quite a champion r usheerd in today’s sports.

    Is there any example of this while using this idiom? We are more likely to say:

    He was quite the champion today. I

    have no idea why “, but I am stuck in the car. I have no idea. And I have no idea why.

    In Greek, pluralise that and

    you get. They were quite the champions today.

    Is that idiomatic?

    How is this currently being discussed in those comments? All comments are correct? When we say “You are the purveyor” it in fact means “You are great champion. That deserves more praise.” ” Again, I don’t know why. In my opinion, someone else may have an explanation for the event.

    When

    you have something to do, don’t you just say the word “champion”? “There is only one champion”. Why can’t we have more than one champion? Idiom, any idiom works. Please allow 50-50 idioms in your quotation.

    Typically,
    a student comes from an upper middle class background somewhat similar to myself however, his father was quite the masked jackal and some of those traits would manifest when I would converse with him on different topics. He would come with a short white hair and a short white hair and some white hair.
    Opvs Daemonvm: The Devil’s Diaries By Draconis Blackthorne

    • 602844 views
    • 14 answers
    • 222370 votes
  • Are the French champions still in the game?

    Is the “recognized version” unused?

    Is there a rule to start with singular thing?

    He was quite a champion r usheerd in today’s sports.

    Is there any example of this while using this idiom? We are more likely to say:

    He was quite the champion today. I

    have no idea why “, but I am stuck in the car. I have no idea. And I have no idea why.

    In Greek, pluralise that and

    you get. They were quite the champions today.

    Is that idiomatic?

    How is this currently being discussed in those comments? All comments are correct? When we say “You are the purveyor” it in fact means “You are great champion. That deserves more praise.” ” Again, I don’t know why. In my opinion, someone else may have an explanation for the event.

    When

    you have something to do, don’t you just say the word “champion”? “There is only one champion”. Why can’t we have more than one champion? Idiom, any idiom works. Please allow 50-50 idioms in your quotation.

    Typically,
    a student comes from an upper middle class background somewhat similar to myself however, his father was quite the masked jackal and some of those traits would manifest when I would converse with him on different topics. He would come with a short white hair and a short white hair and some white hair.
    Opvs Daemonvm: The Devil’s Diaries By Draconis Blackthorne

    • 602844 views
    • 14 answers
    • 222370 votes