2
Points
Questions
1
Answers
95
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Asked on October 16, 2021 in American english.
My two sentences sound the same even though I had been told that your two sentences mean the same thing – each of them has two meanings. All of them are perfectly clear.
Is there some reason why File X should
not refer to ABC in a file M?
Should NOT be referenced from the file X.
Sounds to be like file X contains an ABC that nothing else should reference when using sub-class X? If that’s the intended meaning, then I would use:
ABC from file X should not be referenced.
Does an ABC exist in another file? If so, what are the symbols where is the referenced?
- 353745 views
- 114 answers
- 130208 votes
-
Asked on October 16, 2021 in American english.
My two sentences sound the same even though I had been told that your two sentences mean the same thing – each of them has two meanings. All of them are perfectly clear.
Is there some reason why File X should
not refer to ABC in a file M?
Should NOT be referenced from the file X.
Sounds to be like file X contains an ABC that nothing else should reference when using sub-class X? If that’s the intended meaning, then I would use:
ABC from file X should not be referenced.
Does an ABC exist in another file? If so, what are the symbols where is the referenced?
- 353745 views
- 114 answers
- 130208 votes
-
Asked on October 16, 2021 in American english.
My two sentences sound the same even though I had been told that your two sentences mean the same thing – each of them has two meanings. All of them are perfectly clear.
Is there some reason why File X should
not refer to ABC in a file M?
Should NOT be referenced from the file X.
Sounds to be like file X contains an ABC that nothing else should reference when using sub-class X? If that’s the intended meaning, then I would use:
ABC from file X should not be referenced.
Does an ABC exist in another file? If so, what are the symbols where is the referenced?
- 353745 views
- 114 answers
- 130208 votes
-
Asked on October 16, 2021 in American english.
My two sentences sound the same even though I had been told that your two sentences mean the same thing – each of them has two meanings. All of them are perfectly clear.
Is there some reason why File X should
not refer to ABC in a file M?
Should NOT be referenced from the file X.
Sounds to be like file X contains an ABC that nothing else should reference when using sub-class X? If that’s the intended meaning, then I would use:
ABC from file X should not be referenced.
Does an ABC exist in another file? If so, what are the symbols where is the referenced?
- 353745 views
- 114 answers
- 130208 votes
-
Asked on October 16, 2021 in American english.
My two sentences sound the same even though I had been told that your two sentences mean the same thing – each of them has two meanings. All of them are perfectly clear.
Is there some reason why File X should
not refer to ABC in a file M?
Should NOT be referenced from the file X.
Sounds to be like file X contains an ABC that nothing else should reference when using sub-class X? If that’s the intended meaning, then I would use:
ABC from file X should not be referenced.
Does an ABC exist in another file? If so, what are the symbols where is the referenced?
- 353745 views
- 114 answers
- 130208 votes
-
Asked on October 16, 2021 in American english.
My two sentences sound the same even though I had been told that your two sentences mean the same thing – each of them has two meanings. All of them are perfectly clear.
Is there some reason why File X should
not refer to ABC in a file M?
Should NOT be referenced from the file X.
Sounds to be like file X contains an ABC that nothing else should reference when using sub-class X? If that’s the intended meaning, then I would use:
ABC from file X should not be referenced.
Does an ABC exist in another file? If so, what are the symbols where is the referenced?
- 353745 views
- 114 answers
- 130208 votes
-
Asked on October 16, 2021 in American english.
My two sentences sound the same even though I had been told that your two sentences mean the same thing – each of them has two meanings. All of them are perfectly clear.
Is there some reason why File X should
not refer to ABC in a file M?
Should NOT be referenced from the file X.
Sounds to be like file X contains an ABC that nothing else should reference when using sub-class X? If that’s the intended meaning, then I would use:
ABC from file X should not be referenced.
Does an ABC exist in another file? If so, what are the symbols where is the referenced?
- 353745 views
- 114 answers
- 130208 votes
-
Asked on October 15, 2021 in American english.
My two sentences sound the same even though I had been told that your two sentences mean the same thing – each of them has two meanings. All of them are perfectly clear.
Is there some reason why File X should
not refer to ABC in a file M?
Should NOT be referenced from the file X.
Sounds to be like file X contains an ABC that nothing else should reference when using sub-class X? If that’s the intended meaning, then I would use:
ABC from file X should not be referenced.
Does an ABC exist in another file? If so, what are the symbols where is the referenced?
- 353745 views
- 114 answers
- 130208 votes
-
Asked on October 15, 2021 in American english.
My two sentences sound the same even though I had been told that your two sentences mean the same thing – each of them has two meanings. All of them are perfectly clear.
Is there some reason why File X should
not refer to ABC in a file M?
Should NOT be referenced from the file X.
Sounds to be like file X contains an ABC that nothing else should reference when using sub-class X? If that’s the intended meaning, then I would use:
ABC from file X should not be referenced.
Does an ABC exist in another file? If so, what are the symbols where is the referenced?
- 353745 views
- 114 answers
- 130208 votes
-
Asked on October 15, 2021 in American english.
My two sentences sound the same even though I had been told that your two sentences mean the same thing – each of them has two meanings. All of them are perfectly clear.
Is there some reason why File X should
not refer to ABC in a file M?
Should NOT be referenced from the file X.
Sounds to be like file X contains an ABC that nothing else should reference when using sub-class X? If that’s the intended meaning, then I would use:
ABC from file X should not be referenced.
Does an ABC exist in another file? If so, what are the symbols where is the referenced?
- 353745 views
- 114 answers
- 130208 votes