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- unacceptable to. . . or for? - WordReference Forums
It is unacceptable to me that, because of due to cultural traditions, men are prioritized over women given precedent over women
- inacceptable - WordReference Forums
My understanding is that most Latinate words use in- for negation Germanic words use un- I agree with the previous replies that unacceptable sounds more correct than inacceptable; and of course there are exceptions to every rule; but given that accept is a Latinate word, the logical negation per this "rule" would give inacceptable
- Fully unacceptable - WordReference Forums
Hi Is the adverb "fully" in combination with the adjective "unacceptable" idiomatic? Would "wholly" be the better choice? Example sentence: "Your behaviour is fully unacceptable" vs "Your behaviour is wholly unacceptable " Thanks a lot for your help
- word meaning promoting a bad behaviour - WordReference Forums
Well, condone is a verb If you're looking for a single word that means "promoting bad behavior", then you need an adjective In other words, a word that makes (1) = (2) below: (1) This book promotes bad behavior (2) This book is <adjective> I can't really think of a single adjective The most natural rendering of (1) for me would be the following: (3) This book is a bad influence (on kids
- unacceptable - rude - inappropriate | WordReference Forums
Unacceptable and innapropriate are absolute adjectives which go nicely with completely, but rude would be better alone, or with very before it To give a slightly clearer example, we say that something is very big or absolutely enormous We wouldn't say that it's absolutely big or very enormous
- John is easy to convince Bill to tell Mary that Tom should meet.
John is easy to convince Bill to tell Tom he should meet Of all the people we could suggest to Bill for Tom to meet, John is an easy sell Bill is easily convinced to tell Tom he should meet John What is Chomsky talking about when he says this example is acceptable ? Does he provide a contrasting unacceptable example?
- unacceptable unsatisfactory - WordReference Forums
Isn't unacceptable a great deal stronger than unsatisfactory? I don't think unsatisfactory is a term that fits well in this context, and I'm struggling for an explanation
- qqch, qch, qqc, qc, qqchose (abréviation de quelque chose)
If you mean quelque chose, isn't qqch the more usual abbreviation Mally_pense, you're so right and I couldn't agree more with you! Ms researcher, please avoid both abbreviations in the essay They're both unacceptable, as mally pense said I wouldn't say equally unacceptable thought, qc being a lot worse
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