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- Difference between assist in and assist with
He assisted at the editing of the movie Is "assist in" the same as "assist with"? Can I always substitute the one where the other is used, or is there a difference in meaning? (I think "assist at" refers to a place where a person is assisting, as in "He assisted at the place where the editing was taking place" )
- Assist vs Support - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
He assisted his brothers to carry their father's coffin It's not really useful to try to decide exactly what the words assist and support signify in your two examples People would interpret them in the light of their own experience
- phrase choice - three-word compound adjective hyphenation - English . . .
"Robotic" and "assisted" are also both adjectives, so these should not be hyphenated However, "Robotic" is not an adjective that describes the entire procedure, so there is a problem It should be "robot-assisted" (assisted by a robot) However, this may be medical terminology, and terminology does not always follow the rules of English
- Difference between being at of in someones service
@Rache Perhaps, bu I think of these as "service industry" jobs rather than working "in service" -- which is a somewhat archaic but more dignified term for "professional domestic" type of jobs that require a somewhat different skill set, because they work with a specific household and not the public at large
- word choice - ask for assist or ask for assistance? - English . . .
What is the proper better wording? ask for assist ask for assistance I always thought the later (ask for assistance) until seeing someone using "ask for assist" on some SE site, and before edit
- Whats the difference between go, go to, and go to the?
"A home" would be usually be interpreted as some sort of assisted living facility A person with mental illness or an elderly individual may be put "in a home" I'm going to the home I would not know what to make of this sentence The home? Which home?
- prepositions - help on with something - English Language Learners . . .
I know that "help" is often used with the preposition "with" However, the preposition "on" can be used sometimes as well I googled some examples: He came over from time to time for a littl
- word difference - resulted vs. resulting - English Language Learners . . .
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