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- pervading pervasive - WordReference Forums
Pervading = be present and apparent throughout pervasive = (especially of an unwelcome influence or physical effect) spreading widely throughout an area or a group of people The nuance is that the second is more negative
- C. E. O. s or CEOs or CEOs - WordReference Forums
Digital business isn’t a department; it should be a pervasive approach for the whole organization Getting there is challenging CEOs report that training and culture change programs are the keys to progress Additionally, executive team data literacy strongly correlates to digital business outcome success
- pervasive vs. evasive | WordReference Forums
Pervasive is related to the verb "pervade": to spread through or throughout, esp subtly or gradually; permeate Evasive is related to the verb "evade": to get away from or avoid (imprisonment, captors, etc); escape (Definitions from the Word Reference dictionary at the top of the page ) "pervasive influence" an influence that is spread throughout something (the world in this case) "evasive
- example vs paradigm vs archetype | WordReference Forums
Hi there, just wondering what's the difference between example, paradigm and archetype, as they all somehow have the meaning of "example" e g He came to the U S 20 years ago He is the ________ of the successful Asian businessman Just wondering besides archetype will paradigm work here
- pervasive pattern of disregard - WordReference Forums
Hi all, I'm not a native speaker of English, so please help me understabd the precise meaning of tje word "pervasive" ¿Does refer to a generalized something and how generalized or acute does something has to be to be said "pervasive"? Thank you so much
- Differences between A and B are never more (adjective) than with C
A pervasive B patent C evident D suspect E trivial F inconsequential The anwer given by a Chinese GRE tutoring institution is BC I think the answer is EF, meaning theater and film are similar, but theater and Shakespeare's plays are very different "Never more" here means "can't be more very" Is EF the correct answers to native speakers?
- a festive feel feeling - WordReference Forums
Feel means "atmosphere" or "pervasive mood " I checked a couple of dictionaries and didn't find that meaning listed, but it is a fairly common idiomatic meaning
- Driving force - WordReference Forums
"The pervasive presence of data is a driving force for change the way we understand ourselves " What I want to say is that big data is changing the way we understand ourselves
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