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- “cause” or “causes”? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Or: Is this the only factor that causes such tragedies? In that form, the singular factor matches with the verb causes Your sentence mixes the plural rooms with the singular factor, making it hard for you to figure out which form the verb cause (s) should take (This isn’t necessarily ungrammatical, but sometimes this can make a sentence
- is cause vs. it causes - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
0 In the grammar test below, Why option 3 is not correct? Only where market failure occurs ------ to worry, and even such failure may tend to excessive conservation 1)is there perhaps cause (correct answer) 2)does it perhaps cause 3)it perhaps causes us 4)perhaps there is cause us I just could find the context source here Any help is really
- phrase usage - Low back pain vs. Lower back pain - English . . .
As an native english speaker with pain in my back, i commonly use lower back pain as the lower back indicates the area of the back close to the hips or the bottom of the spine In my interpretation "low back pain" could be read as back pain which is minimal, similar to having "low volume" EDIT: low should not be used as an adjective for back pain, a better adjective would be minimal
- How to explain when one event affects something else, and then . . .
ripple effect: a situation in which one thing causes a series of other things to happen So you could word your sentence like this: A mismatch has a ripple effect: the current edge should be fixed with respect to the previously-fixed edge, which will need to be reaffixed to the edge before that, etc Yet another phrase you might use is chain
- Using makes or causes - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
The drug causes an adverse reaction in patients with a history of heart disease So why "make" not "cause"? As Robusto says in the above comment, "make" just sounds less forceful and somewhat nicer However you could use either, depending on the context This drug makes me feel better (because I want to feel better)
- Is it mutual causation or mutual causality?
3 "Causality" refers to the concept of causes and effects, and is not used to refer to any specific cause and effect, so "mutual causality" does not make sense It would be like saying "90-degree angularity" (incorrect) instead of "90-degree angle" (correct) "Mutual causation" is correct but I would not consider it idiomatic
- A word to describe a person that is solely responsible for all of the . . .
0 The word you may be looking for to call the person who causes all your bad problems is jinx He is a jinx to us and everyone he meets
- grammaticality - Descent vs. descend in the context - English . . .
What causes a nose bleed during the descent? I am not sure that the descent is correct here or not grammatically If it is correct so what about descend, (the)descending? Please add the reason of c
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