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- word usage - Participants vs Participantses - English Language Usage . . .
participants's, janitors's; which is usually shorted to participants', janitors' It is not just a plural possessive issue It is a possessive issue of whenever the possessing noun ends with "s" A genius's intellect; A genius' intellect; Pronouncing participants's is obviously "participantses"
- grammatical number - participants or the participants - English . . .
I'm relatively new to academia and I've noticed scientists write "participants" instead of "the participants" in the context of, for example, "participants did this" in the methods section of journal articles In my opinion, it should be "the participants", since the particular participants that researchers recruited do an experiment
- Whats the difference between attendee and participant?
'All participants received a complimentary gift bag' For both of these, we mean everybody who attended the conference receives the gift bag In other contexts, 'participant' might have a more exclusive meaning For example at a marathon: 'All attendees were entitled to receive a free hotdog'
- Synonyms for participant - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
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- Reschedule meeting due to the unavailability of one participant
I'd like to reschedule the meeting due to the unavailability of one of the participants He's an important element for the meeting I am looking for a sample e-mail to inform all participants that the meeting will be postponed by two hours
- Is it appropriate to use the salutation Dear All in a work email?
I have observed that in my work place, whenever a mail is sent to more than one person( like an information, meeting request or a notice etc ), the mail starts with the salutation "Dear All" This,
- word choice - Participate in or participate on? - English Language . . .
Which is the correct preposition in the sentence below? Why? Participated in on producing quality software solutions for leading global insurance and reinsurance companies
- differences - Participate at vs Participate in - English Language . . .
For instance, participants in a training workshop, seminar, football gala etc When any other preposition is used, that other preposition might just be introducing an additional phrase ( or information) and in that case "in" is implied and thus taken for granted Eg participants at level two hundred performed so well
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