|
- experience, of, in or with - WordReference Forums
For example, "I have a lot of experience in sales and marketing" or "I have experience in teaching " To have experience with something could be either a field or something more specific While you could say, "I have experience with sales and marketing," you could also say, "I have a lot of experience with working with children "
- From In my experience-preposition - WordReference Forums
From my experience is possible, but not common (at least in BE) For example, if you look at the British National Corpus, you find 19 examples, compared with 194 for in my experience In the US corpus (COCA) there is a similar pattern: 165 from compared with 750 in
- 3-year v. 3 years experience - WordReference Forums
The meaning of "experience" is different in your first two sentences A "three-year experience" means that you had an experience that lasted three years For example: "I lived in France in the 1990s It was a wonderful three-year experience" "This position requires three years' experience" means, as you know, work experience
- difference between inexperienced and unexperienced?
Catastrophic knowledge of severe trauma is unexperienced experience that paradoxically stands for an indescribable core of an event that undermines self-in-relation and the concomitant capacities for language, narrative, and knowledge But Googling also will lead you to people who think that there is no such thing as an ''unexperienced
- Long large experience - WordReference Forums
A lot of experience He she is highly experienced But if you have a particular sentence in mind, there may be better options
- earn gain gather experience - WordReference Forums
"Earn experience" is not normal English Gain experience is usually a deliberate action "He worked in the factory to gain experience of production methods" Gather experience is less deliberate or focussed "He toured Europe to gather experience of peoples and cultures"
- Span over or Span across - WordReference Forums
Hi guys, Could you please help me to identify which expression span over or span across is correct in the following context: His power spans over the whole organization His power spans across the organization Thank you in advance!
- a large experience - WordReference Forums
A native speaker is very unlikely to use "big experience" (in this sense of the word "experience") - see the Ngram It would, of course, be understood, but on a CV it (together with any other similar non-fluency indicators) might raise queries about the applicant's level of proficiency in English (and therefore ability to communicate
|
|
|