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  • prepositions - Difference between in and of - English Language . . .
    Can anyone please tell me what's the difference between in and of in the following sentences? Are they both correct? Lionel Messi is the greatest player of in the Argentina football team John is the
  • word usage - Difference of vs difference between - English Language . . .
    A difference of is used to indicate the extent of a difference; it's a measure, whether a degree (temperature), a metre (length), a litre (volume) or a kilogram (mass) There is a difference of half a litre between the capacity of the two jugs There is a difference of nearly a centimetre between the lengths of the tables A difference between is used to compare two creatures objects directly
  • Difference between “is” and “it is” in a sentence
    The password, a boarding pass and the food are the subject of is in the given examples, so you do not need to add an extra subject it In "it is raining", it is the subject so you cannot leave it out So in short, only in the phrase "it is raining" do you use "it", in the other examples "it" should not be there
  • 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
  • word usage - must vs shall - are they the same, or is one a . . .
    0 The differences are only in emphasis; nominally both must and shall express a mandatory rule, as the definition in RFC2119 says Traditionally, shall implied the power to define reality An emperor would not simply utter a wish or an order; he would describe the future reality, because he had absolute power
  • nearby (close by) as an adjective, a preposition, or an adverb
    However, there are three clear and important differences in their meaning and use: 1) The first difference is that near is often used as a preposition, but nearby can never be properly used as a preposition Furthermore, when near is a preposition, it doesn’t simply mean close, it means close to, as shown in this example:
  • How can I get rid of my Indian accent and sound more neutral native
    Keep listening really closely, both to the recording, and to the sound you're making, to pick up any differences Keep going; keep listening and practising It can take weeks or months to fully internalise the sounds, shapes, tones, and rhythms of an accent and can reproduce them for your own words as well as the phrases you've practised on
  • Do the needful -- Why is it used instead of asking a question?
    Do the needful is Indian English, which has been covered on ELU If you're only interacting with other speakers of Indian English then feel free to use it, but avoid it in any other contexts (most Americans and Brits will think it's quaint uneducated) In general, the "standard" form is do what [ever] is necessary, but in OP's specific context most likely nothing like that would be used anyway




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