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- Whats the difference between resolve and solve?
Solve is the most general in meaning and suggestion in this group; it implies the finding of a satisfactory answer or solution, usually to something of at least moderate difficulty {the mystery and disquieting meaninglessness of existence were solved for me now—L P Smith} {create a difficulty rather than solve one—A M Young} Resolve
- solve with vs solve for - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
solved for sth - means that a problem is transformed in such way that can sth can be obtained directly (as in "solve for x") My question is, am I missing any meanings, or confusing them? I got confused with the following sentence: "This problem is hard to solve for some methods" which I believe is incorrect, as one should not solve problems to
- What is the tense ot the sentence The problem has been solved
Or: I have solved the problem 3 That refers to more Present Simple,as you see The problem is solved=The problem is always solved by someone Or "solved" can be used as an adjective,as well (Having a solution, having been explained or answered) That is a solved problem Though,I'm not sure if it really makes sense
- A word or phrase for The problem solved itself
Whenever we close a support ticket at my company, we note the resolution to the problem so that future technicians can see what we did to solve the issue We also send the resolution to the custome
- word choice - Do we resolve a doubt or dispel a doubt? - English . . .
It took me a while to understand keshlam's point and I thought that this answer was the better one Now I realize the part about "angry unnecessarily": If you have a doubt about your professor's paper, you are implying to a certain degree that she is wrong or made a mistake
- Is it okay to say “Your explanation really solved my concerns
"Solve" implies a more black-and-white context—a problem is either solved, or not—whereas a concern admits of intermediate responses or responses of indeterminate magnitude—it may be "addressed" (giving no information as to the success of the response), or "ameliorated" (indicating a reduction of concern)
- Is there a term or word for solving a problem that one created oneself . . .
I am looking for a word or term for the concept of solving a problem that oneself created An example would be a solution to smog: if there wasn't so much emission and pollution, there would be no
- Can the verb solve be applied to the noun challenge?
So long as the noun is something solvable, this would be a valid construction Thus puzzles, Rubik's cubes and equations are all nouns which can be the object of the verb "to solve" So if the challenge was a puzzle, it could be solved If the challenge was, however, physical in nature, it would be more natural to say that the challenge was
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