11
Points
Questions
6
Answers
305
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Asked on April 1, 2021 in Word choice.
From the NOAD :
titled /Tadld/
adjective
(of a person) having a title indicating a high social or official rank.entitle /ntadl/ /ntadl/
verb ntadl ntadl landlord is entitled to need references.
1. A’real’ person (you know what I mean) could answer the question of how to solve a problem of his/her own? What can be better said than done, especially a work of art, given a particular title: an article entitled “The Harried Society”? ”
– According to the archaic tradition, the people give (someone) a specified title expressing their rank, office, and character: they named him Sultan (Mongolian alphabet).What is your video on how to conduct a meeting? What
is your opinion on a song or “Burnami lyric”?
- 730580 views
- 117 answers
- 270153 votes
-
Asked on April 1, 2021 in Word choice.
From the NOAD :
titled /Tadld/
adjective
(of a person) having a title indicating a high social or official rank.entitle /ntadl/ /ntadl/
verb ntadl ntadl landlord is entitled to need references.
1. A’real’ person (you know what I mean) could answer the question of how to solve a problem of his/her own? What can be better said than done, especially a work of art, given a particular title: an article entitled “The Harried Society”? ”
– According to the archaic tradition, the people give (someone) a specified title expressing their rank, office, and character: they named him Sultan (Mongolian alphabet).What is your video on how to conduct a meeting? What
is your opinion on a song or “Burnami lyric”?
- 730580 views
- 117 answers
- 270153 votes
-
Asked on April 1, 2021 in Word choice.
From the NOAD :
titled /Tadld/
adjective
(of a person) having a title indicating a high social or official rank.entitle /ntadl/ /ntadl/
verb ntadl ntadl landlord is entitled to need references.
1. A’real’ person (you know what I mean) could answer the question of how to solve a problem of his/her own? What can be better said than done, especially a work of art, given a particular title: an article entitled “The Harried Society”? ”
– According to the archaic tradition, the people give (someone) a specified title expressing their rank, office, and character: they named him Sultan (Mongolian alphabet).What is your video on how to conduct a meeting? What
is your opinion on a song or “Burnami lyric”?
- 730580 views
- 117 answers
- 270153 votes
-
Asked on April 1, 2021 in Word choice.
From the NOAD :
titled /Tadld/
adjective
(of a person) having a title indicating a high social or official rank.entitle /ntadl/ /ntadl/
verb ntadl ntadl landlord is entitled to need references.
1. A’real’ person (you know what I mean) could answer the question of how to solve a problem of his/her own? What can be better said than done, especially a work of art, given a particular title: an article entitled “The Harried Society”? ”
– According to the archaic tradition, the people give (someone) a specified title expressing their rank, office, and character: they named him Sultan (Mongolian alphabet).What is your video on how to conduct a meeting? What
is your opinion on a song or “Burnami lyric”?
- 730580 views
- 117 answers
- 270153 votes
-
Asked on March 31, 2021 in Word choice.
From the NOAD :
titled /Tadld/
adjective
(of a person) having a title indicating a high social or official rank.entitle /ntadl/ /ntadl/
verb ntadl ntadl landlord is entitled to need references.
1. A’real’ person (you know what I mean) could answer the question of how to solve a problem of his/her own? What can be better said than done, especially a work of art, given a particular title: an article entitled “The Harried Society”? ”
– According to the archaic tradition, the people give (someone) a specified title expressing their rank, office, and character: they named him Sultan (Mongolian alphabet).What is your video on how to conduct a meeting? What
is your opinion on a song or “Burnami lyric”?
- 730580 views
- 117 answers
- 270153 votes
-
Asked on March 31, 2021 in Word choice.
From the NOAD :
titled /Tadld/
adjective
(of a person) having a title indicating a high social or official rank.entitle /ntadl/ /ntadl/
verb ntadl ntadl landlord is entitled to need references.
1. A’real’ person (you know what I mean) could answer the question of how to solve a problem of his/her own? What can be better said than done, especially a work of art, given a particular title: an article entitled “The Harried Society”? ”
– According to the archaic tradition, the people give (someone) a specified title expressing their rank, office, and character: they named him Sultan (Mongolian alphabet).What is your video on how to conduct a meeting? What
is your opinion on a song or “Burnami lyric”?
- 730580 views
- 117 answers
- 270153 votes
-
Asked on March 31, 2021 in Word choice.
From the NOAD :
titled /Tadld/
adjective
(of a person) having a title indicating a high social or official rank.entitle /ntadl/ /ntadl/
verb ntadl ntadl landlord is entitled to need references.
1. A’real’ person (you know what I mean) could answer the question of how to solve a problem of his/her own? What can be better said than done, especially a work of art, given a particular title: an article entitled “The Harried Society”? ”
– According to the archaic tradition, the people give (someone) a specified title expressing their rank, office, and character: they named him Sultan (Mongolian alphabet).What is your video on how to conduct a meeting? What
is your opinion on a song or “Burnami lyric”?
- 730580 views
- 117 answers
- 270153 votes
-
Asked on March 30, 2021 in Word choice.
From the NOAD :
titled /Tadld/
adjective
(of a person) having a title indicating a high social or official rank.entitle /ntadl/ /ntadl/
verb ntadl ntadl landlord is entitled to need references.
1. A’real’ person (you know what I mean) could answer the question of how to solve a problem of his/her own? What can be better said than done, especially a work of art, given a particular title: an article entitled “The Harried Society”? ”
– According to the archaic tradition, the people give (someone) a specified title expressing their rank, office, and character: they named him Sultan (Mongolian alphabet).What is your video on how to conduct a meeting? What
is your opinion on a song or “Burnami lyric”?
- 730580 views
- 117 answers
- 270153 votes
-
Asked on March 30, 2021 in Grammar.
In the sentences you reported, would is not normally used with the verb that is preceded by if. Sentences like the following one are an exception:
She asked me if I would go with her at the summer festival organized in her town.
Is there a
- simple present in English saying “If it rains, we will stay home”. Is
- this subjunctive mood real if I was so rich that I live on Long Island? The
- past perfect, as in “If she had knew that, she would have decided differently. In
the first case, it is indicated an imaginary or hypothetical condition (I am not wealthy, and I will not go to live on Long Island), while in the second case the sentence reporting a fact (we effectively stay home when rains).
If browsing through the corpus of contemporary American English I found these sentences, though. What is the context in which a sentence is found?
If
I would give twice the value of land I could not get an acre of it, the domestic manufacturers are so fond of land that there is no such thing as getting any without great favour; if a man dies who has some, his relations immediately get it among them. Why
can’t we all open our eyes and think about the possibility? If
I went out there and was right in the middle of this stuff, whats going on right now with a bong, why?
They would go to the two Masses if I would play bridge with them afterward.- 741526 views
- 24 answers
- 273063 votes
-
Asked on March 29, 2021 in Grammar.
In the sentences you reported, would is not normally used with the verb that is preceded by if. Sentences like the following one are an exception:
She asked me if I would go with her at the summer festival organized in her town.
Is there a
- simple present in English saying “If it rains, we will stay home”. Is
- this subjunctive mood real if I was so rich that I live on Long Island? The
- past perfect, as in “If she had knew that, she would have decided differently. In
the first case, it is indicated an imaginary or hypothetical condition (I am not wealthy, and I will not go to live on Long Island), while in the second case the sentence reporting a fact (we effectively stay home when rains).
If browsing through the corpus of contemporary American English I found these sentences, though. What is the context in which a sentence is found?
If
I would give twice the value of land I could not get an acre of it, the domestic manufacturers are so fond of land that there is no such thing as getting any without great favour; if a man dies who has some, his relations immediately get it among them. Why
can’t we all open our eyes and think about the possibility? If
I went out there and was right in the middle of this stuff, whats going on right now with a bong, why?
They would go to the two Masses if I would play bridge with them afterward.- 741526 views
- 24 answers
- 273063 votes