-
As a non-native speaker I often hear the word ‘been’ pronounced as /bn/ instead /bin/ which I expect from the …
- 273K views
- 1 answers
- 100K votes
-
Some spoken English words end with two adjacent letters. What is the word “DELIVER”? In German as a non-native speaker, …
- 384K views
- 20 answers
- 141K votes
-
How can a phrasal verb be understood in an English language? How can native speakers help me with this? When …
- 264K views
- 13 answers
- 97K votes
-
In the most recent version of the Economist (March 16 – 22nd 2019), the cover has a large type OH …
- 367 views
- 0 answers
- 2 votes
-
Is it normal to use proceed with something in American English? Isn’t formal something? What are some of the better …
- 261K views
- 1 answers
- 96K votes
-
Does the word “discreet” mean exactly opposite to the word ‘dark’? How does one sayno so discreetly in a very …
- 394 views
- 0 answers
- 6 votes
-
Am I from another country? In my English, we have a single word to describe such phenomenon, wanted to know …
- 270K views
- 11 answers
- 100K votes
-
Merriam-Webster and Oxford seem to suggest that we can offload things, not people, yet “offloading a passenger” is quite prevalent …
- 44K views
- 265 answers
- 16K votes
-
How do you time to start work? What is the office hour? When is your office hours? What is the …
- 218 views
- 0 answers
- 1 votes
-
I have been asked to review a document but I have a dilemma: in below phrase should “D” be capital? …
- 332 views
- 0 answers
- 9 votes