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- When should I use difference or differences?
When you think that there are more than one unlike events involved, use plural For example: Are there any differences? If you talk about one particular What is the major difference?
- Which one sounds more natural: is there any difference or are there . . .
We use a plural form when we expect that there are (or may be) multiple differences Are there any differences between these pictures? One has more people, fewer cars, and a cloudier sky than the other Are there any differences between these models of the same car? One has air conditioning, a radio, and heated seats The other does not, and is
- What is the difference between S and S?
Both express possession, of course We use 's with singular nouns For example, " my son's toys " will be "the toys that belong to my son" We use only an apostrophe (') after plural nouns that end in -s: " my sons' toys " means that I have more than one son and these are their toys We use 's for possession with the other plural nouns For example: " my children's toys; women's wishes, etc
- punctuation - Difference between and - English Language Learners . . .
What's the difference between a single and a double quotation mark in English? I've heard that it only depends on where you live the US (for double quotation mark) or the UK and Australia (for single
- If vs. If and When — Any Differences? - English Language Learners . . .
USA TODAY While a bipartisan group of lawmakers formally introduced the rounding idea under The Common Cents Act on April 30, the decision of if and when to round transactions currently rests with the specific retailer rather than government policy BBC If and when implemented, workers in Japan are set to retire later than anywhere else in the world The Guardian Shafaq Sikandar, 39, has stage
- meaning - difference of vs difference in - English Language Learners . . .
Is there any difference between the following sentences? What is the difference in meaning between those words? What is the difference of meaning between those words?
- differences in usage - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
In everyday spoken language when you, as native English speakers, say " glass " and " cup " are they considered as a synonym for you or you have a special meaning for each one of them? As a non native English speaker I don't find a difference between "I would like to have a glass of water " or "I would like to have a cup of water " Then my question is: Is the name of the vessel - in the spoken
- What is the difference or what are the differences?
1 "What is a difference between X and Y?" is also grammatical, but it means something that one hardly ever wants to say: the speaker has deliberately refused to indicate how many differences he or she thinks there are, and no matter how many the listener thinks there are, the speaker only wants to hear about one of them
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