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- Are names of chemicals not proper nouns? - English Language Usage . . .
Product names which are derived after an inventor's name will often remain capitalized, though not always (e g the petroleum distillate used to power trucks and locomotives is called "diesel" rather than "Diesel" even though it's named after the inventor of the four-stroke compression-ignition engine for which that fuel was formulated)
- Same adjective for two nouns - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
The government placed restrictions on both diesel fuel and diesel engines Here I dont want to repeat the diesel I cannot write: The government placed restrictions on both diesel fuel and engines
- Particulate vs. particle [closed] - English Language Usage Stack . . .
What’s the difference between particulate and particle? Should it be diesel particulates or diesel particles, and why? Could you provide three or more examples where it should use particulate rat
- Throttle is to slow down, but full throttle is max speed?
Originally, throttle meant throat So "full-throttle" for a motorized vehicle is like a lion's full-throated roar - the throttle throat is opened as wide as possible (for maximum throughput of fuel or air) It's just that the verb to throttle came to have the meaning choke (fatally cut off someone's air by squeezing their throat), which led to "throttling back" meaning "reduce the fuel supply
- gerund phrases - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
Even with uncountable nouns, for specific instances types, we have nouns preceded by indefinite articles as in the following examples It is cold outside! I could do with a hot tea! The old diesel
- Why is the BrE “petrol” called gas in AmE?
By the end of the century the gas was derived directly from crude oil and gas oil was renamed Diesel oil (up to 21 carbon atoms per molecule) because its main use was in injection engines petrol vs gasolene gasoline
- meaning - Flammable versus Combustible - English Language Usage . . .
Gas is flammable, diesel vapour combustible In England I was always taught that the difference between flammable and inflammable was that inflammable required a flame to permit burning
- If it works, it works - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
I suppose a more realistic example is the development of powered pumps, locomotives etc Newcomen's atmospheric engine did a vital job, but was bettered by Watt's improvements Trevithick's locomotive of 1804 hauled a load, but modern diesel engines work far more efficiently and reliably I'm not sure this is really an English language question
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