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Asked on March 31, 2021 in Word choice.
Which is the equivalent of “Entitled”, whereby one’s deserving of, as opposed to “Titled” where someone’s already honored? The term “entitled” when used to refer to how something is titled, is just confusing usage. An article in Wikipedia is titled “The Article was… ”
and is more concise.
- 730580 views
- 117 answers
- 270153 votes
-
Asked on March 31, 2021 in Word choice.
Which is the equivalent of “Entitled”, whereby one’s deserving of, as opposed to “Titled” where someone’s already honored? The term “entitled” when used to refer to how something is titled, is just confusing usage. An article in Wikipedia is titled “The Article was… ”
and is more concise.
- 730580 views
- 117 answers
- 270153 votes
-
Asked on March 31, 2021 in Word choice.
Which is the equivalent of “Entitled”, whereby one’s deserving of, as opposed to “Titled” where someone’s already honored? The term “entitled” when used to refer to how something is titled, is just confusing usage. An article in Wikipedia is titled “The Article was… ”
and is more concise.
- 730580 views
- 117 answers
- 270153 votes
-
Asked on March 31, 2021 in Word choice.
Which is the equivalent of “Entitled”, whereby one’s deserving of, as opposed to “Titled” where someone’s already honored? The term “entitled” when used to refer to how something is titled, is just confusing usage. An article in Wikipedia is titled “The Article was… ”
and is more concise.
- 730580 views
- 117 answers
- 270153 votes
-
Asked on March 30, 2021 in Word choice.
Which is the equivalent of “Entitled”, whereby one’s deserving of, as opposed to “Titled” where someone’s already honored? The term “entitled” when used to refer to how something is titled, is just confusing usage. An article in Wikipedia is titled “The Article was… ”
and is more concise.
- 730580 views
- 117 answers
- 270153 votes
-
Asked on March 30, 2021 in Word choice.
Which is the equivalent of “Entitled”, whereby one’s deserving of, as opposed to “Titled” where someone’s already honored? The term “entitled” when used to refer to how something is titled, is just confusing usage. An article in Wikipedia is titled “The Article was… ”
and is more concise.
- 730580 views
- 117 answers
- 270153 votes
-
Asked on March 28, 2021 in Word choice.
Which is the equivalent of “Entitled”, whereby one’s deserving of, as opposed to “Titled” where someone’s already honored? The term “entitled” when used to refer to how something is titled, is just confusing usage. An article in Wikipedia is titled “The Article was… ”
and is more concise.
- 730580 views
- 117 answers
- 270153 votes
-
Asked on March 2, 2021 in Word choice.
Is it necessary to ask a question on Quora? In a conversation, a cue is effective.
I would suggest your thoughts, but
- just as a suggestion “I’m personally invested” doesn’t mean that you are just offering something. It qualifies the fact that you are making a suggestion really.
- Don’t allow yourself to take a ‘I have NO Idea’ moment. Give the person who will give you the solution saying “Never take it,’ ” which you chose before you did this, or leave it” sets the tone that you are floating an idea the person’s way. Is it considered something of a ‘toe in the water’ that wouldn’t necessarily’meant for prime time’ but as a kind of approach has merit?
- “I see where you’re going with this” sets a tone of offering something that you consider sympathetic to the author’s own idea. What does it mean if you are looking at somebody’s suggestion objectively and that you are providing non-critical, constructive feedback.
Is there any use for a word or phrase that you can use to describe yourself according to some other phrase or phrase? If you followed them with a ‘but’ will make them little passive/aggressive phrases. Be careful how you qualify yourself and your ideas and remain direct. Where there is a foot hold for suggestion the person will likely not be to critical receiving feedback and likelier will appreciate it (you
might ask a question on Quora, of course)
- 1161420 views
- 4 answers
- 418542 votes