As of or from - English Language Learners Stack Exchange The first one sounds much more natural to me too, but I'm not sure why as of 3 pm doesn't sound right We say from now on rather than and onward, but as of now can mean starting from now
Does it have or has? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange The answer in both instances is 'have' It is ungrammatical to use 'has' in questions that begin with 'Do' or 'Does' In these types of questions the verb 'do' is conjugated based on whether the noun is first, second or third person (eg Do I, Do you or , Does he) The 'have' part of the question is not conjugated and appears as the bare infinitive regardless of the person of the noun
Such vs. Such a - English Language Learners Stack Exchange Such and Such: Count nouns vs non-count nouns Two distinct (and usually non-overlapping) possibilities exist for singular nouns X: such X (for a mass noun) such an X (for a count noun) Usually you must use exactly one of those, not either If both forms are admissible, then we’re talking about two different words or senses of words If it’s a count noun in the singular, it takes an
articles - Made in USA vs. Made in the USA - English Language . . . 1 COMPLYING WITH THE MADE IN USA STANDARD "Made in USA" is the "official" standard when used for qualified or unqualified claims about a products manufacturing origin The statement isn't about 'preference' but falls in line with legal requirements set out by the US Federal Trade Commission and US Customs Service