0
Points
Questions
0
Answers
9
-
Asked on December 19, 2021 in Grammar.
The verb were is correct. You should add’s to committees: The minutes
of the first coordinating and consultative committees’ meetings were translated into English and then sent back to the manager.
We commonly want to use the past simple tense to set a finished past event as a main, reference, or anchor time period in a narrative.
We also usually use the past simple to describe sequences of events when we use terms like then to establish the order of multiple events.
Where any other way to show sequence is allowed to take it in a simple way and for a sentence to be more meaningful. What happens is as follows: Those were verbed and then verbed and then the list of steps repeated because the list was repeated twice in order.
- 275877 views
- 8 answers
- 102016 votes
-
Asked on March 27, 2021 in Meaning.
Subject to you meeting any outstanding non-academic conditions.
Means
If you take care of your non-academic obligations (if you have any).
Subject means dependent on;
Adj 2. And aj 3. And subject means dependent on: Depend on. A separate legal entity is required to enter into a merger with one of its shareholders. The merger are due approval by the shareholder. Please provide such details below. ie=UTF-8&q=define+subject&gfe_rd=cr&ei=P7q5V5eRBs2A2QTPmYyIBQ
Your sentence might mean that you can get your degree if you have paid your tuition, etc.
- 788524 views
- 3 answers
- 289787 votes
-
Asked on March 27, 2021 in Meaning.
Subject to you meeting any outstanding non-academic conditions.
Means
If you take care of your non-academic obligations (if you have any).
Subject means dependent on;
Adj 2. And aj 3. And subject means dependent on: Depend on. A separate legal entity is required to enter into a merger with one of its shareholders. The merger are due approval by the shareholder. Please provide such details below. ie=UTF-8&q=define+subject&gfe_rd=cr&ei=P7q5V5eRBs2A2QTPmYyIBQ
Your sentence might mean that you can get your degree if you have paid your tuition, etc.
- 788524 views
- 3 answers
- 289787 votes
-
Asked on March 27, 2021 in Meaning.
Subject to you meeting any outstanding non-academic conditions.
Means
If you take care of your non-academic obligations (if you have any).
Subject means dependent on;
Adj 2. And aj 3. And subject means dependent on: Depend on. A separate legal entity is required to enter into a merger with one of its shareholders. The merger are due approval by the shareholder. Please provide such details below. ie=UTF-8&q=define+subject&gfe_rd=cr&ei=P7q5V5eRBs2A2QTPmYyIBQ
Your sentence might mean that you can get your degree if you have paid your tuition, etc.
- 788524 views
- 3 answers
- 289787 votes
-
Asked on March 26, 2021 in Grammar.
I have
no choice but to think about something. And at that moment I can watch the world change forever.
Something
(smiles) is going to happen someday.
In this context, it could be a positive expectation or a negative expectation. On English, what does “this” refer to in this can be the easy part. The
speaker’s use of “got” suggests that he/she may be reluctant to think it, and therefore it is a prediction that something bad will happen.
It could also mean something like a concept of balance or fairness forces him or her to conclude that they were owed this recent peace after previous trials.
- 757241 views
- 3 answers
- 280952 votes
-
Asked on March 25, 2021 in Meaning.
In the senses that you give above, we use pull over more often to indicate a brief pause while travelling: to look at a map, to let others pass in front, in response to a police car’s red light, etc. I have pulled over and hit everything. Can we please pull over without parking?
We use park more often to indicate a longer stop at a destination.
Would the most common utterance of drop down and let’s park be Let’s park instead of Stop Clear?
- 796406 views
- 4 answers
- 293493 votes
-
Asked on March 25, 2021 in Grammar.
Ladder past to be forgotten.
Is
it simply because history is forgotten?
I am really frustrated and confused. Did you find yourself confused and confused as to how to deal with the situation?
- 696685 views
- 1 answers
- 258164 votes
-
Asked on March 15, 2021 in Meaning.
Concomitant is a formal word. It’s for people who normally employ the high register language that we should expect to know how to use it. Even such people may find it awkward or pretentious if they encounter the word in a non-formal situation.
It’s helpful to understand the word’s precise meaning and to use it when we want to communicate that precise meaning in a context where people are likely to expect high register language, and when no synonym has a meaning or feeling that better suits our communicative purpose in that context.
We feel that someone is using a word like this mainly to demonstrate that they know it. Do we experience this as pretentious or pompous?
Is it possible to make a better choice in any context in between formal and not-so-formal? How do I respond to others’ feedback?
The core meaning of the word conveys a relationship in time:
concomitant
adj.
Occurring or existing concurrently; attendant: poverty and its concomitant social problems. Synonyms at contemporary (Jun).As an example, compare and contrast sentence types from a dictionary with a dictionary. Why do some dictionaries fail for this purpose? How and when to use a word is lexicographers responsible for the meaning of the word?
It seems to me that the idea in the example sentences would better be communicated something like “She loved traveling, even with all its pressures and worries” (As seen above) the fact with the first sentence is that people say “I’m from Brazil”. She knows many people who are traveling. Or, She loved travel in all its aspects, including the cares of travelers. I just took a photo with her. I don’t get a feeling that anything about the sentence besides the word is formal in tone.
In this case the word “clinical or research information” is the word used as the first example. (The other example is found in a sentence.) The third example says ‘a word’ but also marks me as ‘no use’. Entertainment Weekly is not a formal publication, and here is Wikipedia news. We can, I think, replace the word usual to achieve a cleaner, more straightforward message without losing any significant value. How can you write a book trying to impress (with that wook)?
Where can we get more informative information about usage in context in language corpora?
- 899612 views
- 1 answers
- 335477 votes
-
Asked on February 27, 2021 in Word choice.
What is the
deal with a
take a crap
take a dump Weeek a bread? And as came up in an ELL chatroom pursuant to this post:
Dropping off the Browns at the Superbowl. (This is less common, and
is intended to carry a humorous tone.) and as came up in an ELL chatroom pursuant to this post: Preparing for the Superbowl.
How do I take these vulgar words for a person?
How does one speak of an utterance?
I need to use the restroom and I know, it’s going to take time. What is the euphemism that we
use here or at other times that make it clearer or more specific?
Some of the most common euphemisms are used like football or soccer with children. To go poo | poo poo | caca | stinky To go number 2 To ‘have|make a bowel
movement | BM Or To move one’s bowels The term
Bounce carries the same
sentiment as other terms, but is not in that sense.
If you’re worried about someone defecating, a technical term is to defecate and NOT to smoke.
What are some examples of a scam.?
- 1255820 views
- 2 answers
- 428742 votes