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  • grammar - When is someone singular and when is it plural? - English . . .
    This is why “Someone cleans the house” is a correct and natural sounding sentence However, there is this idiomatic construction: to have + someone+ do something (infinitive without to) which means 'to get somebody to do something'
  • “to check IN on someone” OR “to check on someone“?
    to make sure someone is doing okay, be it in their work, health, or otherwise I think check up on is the best as this can carry the sense of finding out about their welfare
  • Anyone Someone - Who That - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    2 Someone and anyone mean different things So which one is right depends on what you want to say That is quite common in everyday English when speaking about a person, especially in spoken English In formal English and in written English, who might be preferred Someone refers to a specific but unidentified person: There's someone at the door
  • Which is grammatically correct: if someone was starving or if . . .
    2 "if someone was starving on an island" This denotes the factual condition of whether someone was at an earlier time starving "if someone were starving on an island" This denotes a hypothetical, as opposed to a factual statement about something already happened Using "were" in this case is known as the subjunctive mood
  • What is the origin of the term, “to 86 someone”? [duplicate]
    The paragraph reads; If you ever heard the term “ to 86 someone, ” it comes from the restaurant industry – code to refuse service, or alternatively to take an item off the menu I’m curious to know why the number 86 came to represent the refusal of service at service establishments Does someone know the provenance? Addendum
  • difference between engage with someone and engage someone?
    Engage with somebody means, as others have said, to interact with that person, usually from a position of greater power (managers are frequently exhorted to engage with employees, but rarely the other way round) Engage somebody has many possible meanings, depending on context: the army engage the enemy, you may engage somebody in conversation by simply going up and speaking to him, a pretty
  • A word for someone who loves searching, learning new things?
    I'm looking for a suitable word or expression, for someone who really loves to learn, search and read about new things (Technologies, science, economics, politics ), so that his passion is only to
  • prepositions - “provide X to someone” vs “provide X for someone . . .
    In other words, these are questions of coherent and natural-sounding phrasing, rather than strictly grammar, I believe "Provide for the common good" is an example of "provide" without an A and a B, by the way You can "provide for" something, or "provision" something, or "provide" something to someone




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