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- punctuation - How to use a numbered list inside a sentence - English . . .
From the Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association, 6 th ed , p 64, § 3 04: Within a paragraph or sentence, identify elements in a series by lowercase letters in parentheses The participant’s three choices were (a) working with another participant, (b) working with a team, and (c) working alone I personally prefer to italicize the enumerating letter (or number) and its
- differences - Participate at vs Participate in - English Language . . .
Can we use both "participate at" and "participate in" interchangeably? Is there a difference between the two if any?
- Participants vs Participantses [closed] - English Language Usage . . .
So, first make your work plural: Participants In most cases, making that word possessive is simply a matter of adding the apostrophe to the plural noun: Participants' So, these variations are available: Participant = singular; Participants = Plural; Participant's = singular possessive; Participants' = plural possessive
- Whats the difference between attendee and participant?
Participant = one who did something during the event There's a certain sense of mere attendance in the word attendee that makes it so some contemporary events prefer to think of all present as participants Here, I take it the basic idea is that even if you don't have a specific role, you participate through active listening
- Synonyms for participant - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
Is there a synonym for participant suitable for a research paper? I have seen words such as colleague, member, party, etc in various thesauruses, but these do not fit with the meaning I am trying to
- Filling out forms that ask for “relationship with”
While I think Dori's and Jimi Oke's answers are correct, I would like to note that there are plenty of forms that just give spaces for "name [of other person]" and "relationship " This is common when they want a list of people to include on your insurance, for example I hate this You can fudge with your husband or wife by saying "spouse" but if your child is in the "name" slot, it is not
- differences - Patient vs. subject in clinical research - English . . .
A 'patient' is a person receiving medical care, while a 'subject' (or 'participant') is a person being experimented on Often the two categories overlap, but not necessarily For example a trial to ensure that a drug has no side-effects may involve giving it to people who are not sick, in which case they are a subject but not a patient
- What are people in a conversation called in English?
Possible Duplicate: One that is holding a conversation Currently I am trying to develop a mail software and I want to find the right word (if it exists) for people who are in a conversation It
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