2
Points
Questions
1
Answers
7
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Asked on December 22, 2021 in Single word requests.
Self-serving – MW
Having or showing concern only for your own needs and interests.
There are dozens of synonyms for “sensical” in Thesaurus. Please note that some of them are not in the best English. One example can be found here. I agree with you about self-serving.
- 270813 views
- 8 answers
- 99993 votes
-
Asked on December 21, 2021 in Single word requests.
Self-serving – MW
Having or showing concern only for your own needs and interests.
There are dozens of synonyms for “sensical” in Thesaurus. Please note that some of them are not in the best English. One example can be found here. I agree with you about self-serving.
- 270813 views
- 8 answers
- 99993 votes
-
Asked on December 21, 2021 in Single word requests.
Self-serving – MW
Having or showing concern only for your own needs and interests.
There are dozens of synonyms for “sensical” in Thesaurus. Please note that some of them are not in the best English. One example can be found here. I agree with you about self-serving.
- 270813 views
- 8 answers
- 99993 votes
-
Asked on December 20, 2021 in Single word requests.
Self-serving – MW
Having or showing concern only for your own needs and interests.
There are dozens of synonyms for “sensical” in Thesaurus. Please note that some of them are not in the best English. One example can be found here. I agree with you about self-serving.
- 270813 views
- 8 answers
- 99993 votes
-
Asked on March 25, 2021 in Word choice.
I think that carried out is a good one. Any of these would fit and work particularly well in an
- individual case.
- Carried
- out
- Conducted
- Performed (executed? What
is your opinion on “I love you?”
- 787859 views
- 2 answers
- 292835 votes
-
Asked on March 24, 2021 in Word choice.
I think that carried out is a good one. Any of these would fit and work particularly well in an
- individual case.
- Carried
- out
- Conducted
- Performed (executed? What
is your opinion on “I love you?”
- 787859 views
- 2 answers
- 292835 votes
-
Asked on March 9, 2021 in Other.
Rule #1: Never trust an article to be 100% grammatically and syntactically correct, wherever it might come from. People are human and by the number of articles getting published daily (both in paper and on web), mistakes are bound to appear.
Is there a definition for the Present Perfect? Since the article talks about something that has been occurring up until now ( past being the keyword for that in over the past decade ) and draws conclusions from that, would the Present Perfect be a more suited tense?
In my humble opinion, this is more a mistake than an intended use of the simple past. I’m a human too, and I could be sorry but to me the usage of the expression over the past decade makes using the simple past quite difficult.
- 1001953 views
- 2 answers
- 376296 votes