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890
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Asked on July 13, 2021 in American english.
The phrase ‘in two years’ is often used in words, but I disagree with certain semantics. The meaning of this phrase is obviously not semantic. Leveraging the difference in meaning might require nuanced poetic use, but I think not. For past tense, negative constructions (as in in “Bill hasn’t taken a vacation in/for 2
- years”), ‘.. in 2 years’ means’at any time in the past 2 years’; ‘…
- for 2 years’ means’since sometime prior to the past couple year’.
What does it mean when you say something what actually makes you change your name?
- 490648 views
- 45 answers
- 181006 votes
-
Asked on July 13, 2021 in American english.
The phrase ‘in two years’ is often used in words, but I disagree with certain semantics. The meaning of this phrase is obviously not semantic. Leveraging the difference in meaning might require nuanced poetic use, but I think not. For past tense, negative constructions (as in in “Bill hasn’t taken a vacation in/for 2
- years”), ‘.. in 2 years’ means’at any time in the past 2 years’; ‘…
- for 2 years’ means’since sometime prior to the past couple year’.
What does it mean when you say something what actually makes you change your name?
- 490648 views
- 45 answers
- 181006 votes
-
Asked on July 13, 2021 in American english.
The phrase ‘in two years’ is often used in words, but I disagree with certain semantics. The meaning of this phrase is obviously not semantic. Leveraging the difference in meaning might require nuanced poetic use, but I think not. For past tense, negative constructions (as in in “Bill hasn’t taken a vacation in/for 2
- years”), ‘.. in 2 years’ means’at any time in the past 2 years’; ‘…
- for 2 years’ means’since sometime prior to the past couple year’.
What does it mean when you say something what actually makes you change your name?
- 490648 views
- 45 answers
- 181006 votes
-
Asked on July 13, 2021 in American english.
The phrase ‘in two years’ is often used in words, but I disagree with certain semantics. The meaning of this phrase is obviously not semantic. Leveraging the difference in meaning might require nuanced poetic use, but I think not. For past tense, negative constructions (as in in “Bill hasn’t taken a vacation in/for 2
- years”), ‘.. in 2 years’ means’at any time in the past 2 years’; ‘…
- for 2 years’ means’since sometime prior to the past couple year’.
What does it mean when you say something what actually makes you change your name?
- 490648 views
- 45 answers
- 181006 votes
-
Asked on July 12, 2021 in American english.
The phrase ‘in two years’ is often used in words, but I disagree with certain semantics. The meaning of this phrase is obviously not semantic. Leveraging the difference in meaning might require nuanced poetic use, but I think not. For past tense, negative constructions (as in in “Bill hasn’t taken a vacation in/for 2
- years”), ‘.. in 2 years’ means’at any time in the past 2 years’; ‘…
- for 2 years’ means’since sometime prior to the past couple year’.
What does it mean when you say something what actually makes you change your name?
- 490648 views
- 45 answers
- 181006 votes
-
Asked on July 12, 2021 in American english.
The phrase ‘in two years’ is often used in words, but I disagree with certain semantics. The meaning of this phrase is obviously not semantic. Leveraging the difference in meaning might require nuanced poetic use, but I think not. For past tense, negative constructions (as in in “Bill hasn’t taken a vacation in/for 2
- years”), ‘.. in 2 years’ means’at any time in the past 2 years’; ‘…
- for 2 years’ means’since sometime prior to the past couple year’.
What does it mean when you say something what actually makes you change your name?
- 490648 views
- 45 answers
- 181006 votes
-
Asked on July 12, 2021 in American english.
The phrase ‘in two years’ is often used in words, but I disagree with certain semantics. The meaning of this phrase is obviously not semantic. Leveraging the difference in meaning might require nuanced poetic use, but I think not. For past tense, negative constructions (as in in “Bill hasn’t taken a vacation in/for 2
- years”), ‘.. in 2 years’ means’at any time in the past 2 years’; ‘…
- for 2 years’ means’since sometime prior to the past couple year’.
What does it mean when you say something what actually makes you change your name?
- 490648 views
- 45 answers
- 181006 votes
-
Asked on July 10, 2021 in American english.
The phrase ‘in two years’ is often used in words, but I disagree with certain semantics. The meaning of this phrase is obviously not semantic. Leveraging the difference in meaning might require nuanced poetic use, but I think not. For past tense, negative constructions (as in in “Bill hasn’t taken a vacation in/for 2
- years”), ‘.. in 2 years’ means’at any time in the past 2 years’; ‘…
- for 2 years’ means’since sometime prior to the past couple year’.
What does it mean when you say something what actually makes you change your name?
- 490648 views
- 45 answers
- 181006 votes
-
Asked on July 9, 2021 in American english.
The phrase ‘in two years’ is often used in words, but I disagree with certain semantics. The meaning of this phrase is obviously not semantic. Leveraging the difference in meaning might require nuanced poetic use, but I think not. For past tense, negative constructions (as in in “Bill hasn’t taken a vacation in/for 2
- years”), ‘.. in 2 years’ means’at any time in the past 2 years’; ‘…
- for 2 years’ means’since sometime prior to the past couple year’.
What does it mean when you say something what actually makes you change your name?
- 490648 views
- 45 answers
- 181006 votes
-
Asked on July 9, 2021 in American english.
The phrase ‘in two years’ is often used in words, but I disagree with certain semantics. The meaning of this phrase is obviously not semantic. Leveraging the difference in meaning might require nuanced poetic use, but I think not. For past tense, negative constructions (as in in “Bill hasn’t taken a vacation in/for 2
- years”), ‘.. in 2 years’ means’at any time in the past 2 years’; ‘…
- for 2 years’ means’since sometime prior to the past couple year’.
What does it mean when you say something what actually makes you change your name?
- 490648 views
- 45 answers
- 181006 votes