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Asked on June 1, 2021 in Grammar.
What do we see as the effing suffix for -like nouns in English? If all dictionary programs built into word processing software attempted to keep up with all of them, their data size would be massive.
What is the popular text dictionary? No listing for breadlike (though Wiktionary does), but that hardly means it’s “not a word. Even US Army mentions ny variety
of commercial or homemade bread or breadlike product as rolls, muffins, biscuits and bagels. ”
Can you still use the hyphen for making gingerbread dough
but it doesn’t work for baking?
How do I find Breadlike or Bread-like using search engines? If you must, it’s up to you. If Breadlike is a word you can edit, post, and share (without using any ads) you think it could be flagged as spam in
the dictionary?
- 546718 views
- 89 answers
- 201741 votes
-
Asked on June 1, 2021 in Grammar.
What do we see as the effing suffix for -like nouns in English? If all dictionary programs built into word processing software attempted to keep up with all of them, their data size would be massive.
What is the popular text dictionary? No listing for breadlike (though Wiktionary does), but that hardly means it’s “not a word. Even US Army mentions ny variety
of commercial or homemade bread or breadlike product as rolls, muffins, biscuits and bagels. ”
Can you still use the hyphen for making gingerbread dough
but it doesn’t work for baking?
How do I find Breadlike or Bread-like using search engines? If you must, it’s up to you. If Breadlike is a word you can edit, post, and share (without using any ads) you think it could be flagged as spam in
the dictionary?
- 546718 views
- 89 answers
- 201741 votes
-
Asked on April 6, 2021 in Grammar.
If Jenner is an author or a satirical author with whom you are in in dialogue about Kipling, Conrad, or Lawrence, you treat him and all other sources as if they were still living persons, using the present tense. What did a person with a surname, or name, have like “Mr. C’s father” (what did he do for his father’s name) say to him? If,
on the other hand, the bare fact that Jenner made the comment is of significance, then use the past tense.
Are Kipling, Conrad, and Lawrence dead, so their different views of life are still in the past tense?
- 715565 views
- 30 answers
- 263528 votes
-
Asked on April 6, 2021 in Grammar.
If Jenner is an author or a satirical author with whom you are in in dialogue about Kipling, Conrad, or Lawrence, you treat him and all other sources as if they were still living persons, using the present tense. What did a person with a surname, or name, have like “Mr. C’s father” (what did he do for his father’s name) say to him? If,
on the other hand, the bare fact that Jenner made the comment is of significance, then use the past tense.
Are Kipling, Conrad, and Lawrence dead, so their different views of life are still in the past tense?
- 715565 views
- 30 answers
- 263528 votes
-
Asked on April 6, 2021 in Grammar.
If Jenner is an author or a satirical author with whom you are in in dialogue about Kipling, Conrad, or Lawrence, you treat him and all other sources as if they were still living persons, using the present tense. What did a person with a surname, or name, have like “Mr. C’s father” (what did he do for his father’s name) say to him? If,
on the other hand, the bare fact that Jenner made the comment is of significance, then use the past tense.
Are Kipling, Conrad, and Lawrence dead, so their different views of life are still in the past tense?
- 715565 views
- 30 answers
- 263528 votes
-
Asked on April 6, 2021 in Grammar.
If Jenner is an author or a satirical author with whom you are in in dialogue about Kipling, Conrad, or Lawrence, you treat him and all other sources as if they were still living persons, using the present tense. What did a person with a surname, or name, have like “Mr. C’s father” (what did he do for his father’s name) say to him? If,
on the other hand, the bare fact that Jenner made the comment is of significance, then use the past tense.
Are Kipling, Conrad, and Lawrence dead, so their different views of life are still in the past tense?
- 715565 views
- 30 answers
- 263528 votes
-
Asked on April 6, 2021 in Grammar.
If Jenner is an author or a satirical author with whom you are in in dialogue about Kipling, Conrad, or Lawrence, you treat him and all other sources as if they were still living persons, using the present tense. What did a person with a surname, or name, have like “Mr. C’s father” (what did he do for his father’s name) say to him? If,
on the other hand, the bare fact that Jenner made the comment is of significance, then use the past tense.
Are Kipling, Conrad, and Lawrence dead, so their different views of life are still in the past tense?
- 715565 views
- 30 answers
- 263528 votes
-
Asked on April 6, 2021 in Grammar.
If Jenner is an author or a satirical author with whom you are in in dialogue about Kipling, Conrad, or Lawrence, you treat him and all other sources as if they were still living persons, using the present tense. What did a person with a surname, or name, have like “Mr. C’s father” (what did he do for his father’s name) say to him? If,
on the other hand, the bare fact that Jenner made the comment is of significance, then use the past tense.
Are Kipling, Conrad, and Lawrence dead, so their different views of life are still in the past tense?
- 715565 views
- 30 answers
- 263528 votes
-
Asked on April 5, 2021 in Grammar.
If Jenner is an author or a satirical author with whom you are in in dialogue about Kipling, Conrad, or Lawrence, you treat him and all other sources as if they were still living persons, using the present tense. What did a person with a surname, or name, have like “Mr. C’s father” (what did he do for his father’s name) say to him? If,
on the other hand, the bare fact that Jenner made the comment is of significance, then use the past tense.
Are Kipling, Conrad, and Lawrence dead, so their different views of life are still in the past tense?
- 715565 views
- 30 answers
- 263528 votes
-
Asked on April 5, 2021 in Grammar.
If Jenner is an author or a satirical author with whom you are in in dialogue about Kipling, Conrad, or Lawrence, you treat him and all other sources as if they were still living persons, using the present tense. What did a person with a surname, or name, have like “Mr. C’s father” (what did he do for his father’s name) say to him? If,
on the other hand, the bare fact that Jenner made the comment is of significance, then use the past tense.
Are Kipling, Conrad, and Lawrence dead, so their different views of life are still in the past tense?
- 715565 views
- 30 answers
- 263528 votes