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- Requirement on of for - WordReference Forums
The requirements of the university on the applicants for (their) admission The university's requirements for admission I can't imagine that they would need to use any statement about the applicants because "admission requirements" implies requirements that applicants must comply with
- requirements on to for? - WordReference Forums
Hello!:) Would you please state which preposition suits the best? The government has established higher requirements to on for certain products Thank you in advance!
- To comply with the requirements? - WordReference Forums
Hello, Dutchpupil Welcome to the forum I don't see anything wrong with the grammar of "I can comply with your requirements " However, that doesn't sound like a very positive thing to say about yourself Something like "I have all the skills that you are asking for" sounds better to me
- Put high requirements on something | WordReference Forums
put high requirements on a legal regime governing civil liability Mobile operators put high requirements on their infrastructure, in particular on availability and reliability of call control
- make requirements of raise requirements to - WordReference Forums
Hi all, we can say make requirements of someone, but can we say raise requirements to someone? For example, the teacher made some additional requirements of his students
- In conformance to with - WordReference Forums
While editing a technical document, I encountered a sentence beginning with the phrase, "In conformance to user requirements, " My instinct was to change the wording to "In conformance with user requirements " Indeed, a Google search confirms my sense: "in conformance with" - About
- to address requirements - WordReference Forums
I see this sentence in a technical document: "This versatility allows a contractor to keep just one product on site that can address both placement requirements " I know "problem" and "issue" can be addressed, I also know it's common to say "meet" or "satisfy" requirement, but it is the first
- high requirement - WordReference Forums
Is it natural to say "This teacher has high low requirements for students' behaviors"? I searched through google but found "low system requirements" to be acceptable I don't understand why we can't say high or low requirements Thank you!
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