|
- 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
- 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
- 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
- Participate in or participate on? - English Language Usage Stack . . .
Which is the correct preposition in the sentence below? Why? Participated in on producing quality software solutions for leading global insurance and reinsurance companies
- Is there an idiom for winning a contest because you were the only . . .
Is there an idiom for "winning a contest because you were the only participant"? Ask Question Asked 8 years, 6 months ago Modified 8 years, 6 months ago
- 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?
- Single word for quiz competition participant
Is there a word for a person who is interested in regularly participate in quiz competitions (e g pub trivia nights)? A sample sentence: My skills: Web development, UX design, (quiz wiz?),
- grammatical number - participants or the participants - English . . .
I'm relatively new to academia and I've noticed scientists write quot;participants quot; instead of quot;the participants quot; in the context of, for example, quot;participants did this quot; i
|
|
|