- implement on, in, or to? - WordReference Forums
My customer wants me to change the packing method and I tell him that I will implement this change in on to next shipment which preposition is best used here?
- Implement in to into? - WordReference Forums
Hello there, Just wondering which of the following prepositions would be the best choice here: If he hadn’t gained his finance experience earlier, he wouldn’t have implemented such successful sales strategies in into to his candy business right at the start Thanks
- implement in into - WordReference Forums
Hello, I was just wondering which one of these two prepositions is better in this context It's quite hard to implement these new words into in my speech
- Carry out, implement, execute, conduct, fulfil
2) We can use the verb "implement" when you want to put something in use (e g to implement a law, to implement a decision, to implement a plan) but you can't interchange this verb with "carry out" and any other listed verb up above 3) We can interchange "carry out" and "fulfil" merely as the meaning of doing complete a task, duty and so on
- perched on a barren, windblown bench, or tagged onto a river or a . . .
The rest are towns, scattered across the expanse with as much as sixty miles between them, their populations two thousand, fifty, or ten They are fugitive-looking, perched on a barren, windblown bench, or tagged onto a river or a railroad, or laid out straight in a farming valley with implement stores and a block-long Mormon church
- 150 year olds | Southern Maryland Community Forums
What I do doubt is longer term ramifications of what they implement They don’t possess the experience to see things You know, like those nitwits in Maryland who concocted a millionaire’s tax - and promptly saw millionaires MOVE AWAY, something easily done when you’re rich
- As spoken As speaking - WordReference Forums
Hello, I just got confused recently with below expression 1 As speaking spoken over the phone, we'll implement the changes immediately 2 Thank you for your time speaking spoken over the phone Could anybody tell me which way of saying sounds like more native? Thank you very much!
- often vs oftenly - WordReference Forums
There is also the case with using often and oftenly etc For example rude ande rudely to make the case clearer A person may be rude but he will speak rudely I think that the same rule should apply to often and oftenly , I mean that people oftenly use "often" when it's needed to use
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