Usage of words like «yeah» and «gonna» have no place in quality learning.
Not exact matches
it is just
like an uneducated olf to mix up the street
usage of a
word as compared to the scienctific
usage of a
word.
I shall assume, moreover, that in formal
usage as in common speech the English
word «priest» is,
like the French prêtre, the equivalent
of sacerdos or hiereus, in spite
of its etymological derivation from presbyteros.
I
liked your
usage of Costa but may I suggest it be used to describe from here on in the really aggressive
word to name a woman's genitalia and someone who acts
like one (starts with a C and ends in a T)
Including unnecessary
words and punctuation: There's no way a short article
like this can cover all the rules
of commas, participial phrases, and other bits
of grammar and
usage that would be esoteric if they weren't so important.
Plotting the rank
of the
words versus their frequency reveals that tag vocabulary,
like word usage in languages such as English, follows a power law.
Like all
words that have come unmoored from their actual origins (by the way, I'm not referring to the actual French
word for «author,» but the cinema - specific
usage), it now indicates a range
of possible implications, exactly what shade depending on the implicator.
These are things
like spelling,
word usage and punctuation, but also consistent application
of terms, formatting, etc..
Also, students need to take care
of the individual things
like word limit, writing pattern, correct
usage of words and following the appropriate norms preferred by the university and professors.
The common
usage of the
word flood includes things
like broken pipes and negligent upstairs neighbors.
I've thought about «compound annual shrink rate» and «compound annual loss rate», etc. and I can think
of a variety
of other possibilities, but I'd
like to know what
wording is common
usage, if any.
«I think King.com has a strong argument that most
of the consumer base in question (e.g., those purchasing on app stores, etc.) are impulse buyers, and thus may be more inclined to make snap judgments based on simple
word usage like «candy» and «saga»,» he or she wrote.
@Cliffy73: disqus Feel free to spell it however you
like in your own work; Webster's lists the «S» plural first for all English - language
usage of the
word, regardless
of meaning.
In an increased effort to be politically correct, a new inclusive language policy from administrators at Princeton University is seeking to end the
usage of gender - specific
words like «man» on campus.
I find it telling that someone who accuses those who use the
word «pollution» to describe excess atmospheric CO2
of being «Orwellian» can also describe proposals for what is a form
of «user - pays» in fossil fuel
usage as «
like listening to Marxist students
of the 1960s.»
Some may argue that the type
of usage represented in the HTC video is so far outside
of the norm that it isn't likely to be misconstrued as a real use case — in other
words, nobody is going to take diving selfies with the phone
like Olympian Tom Daley.
Avoid
usage of unclear
words like managed, handled that raise a further question
of how.