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He is my family lt;member gt;. | WordReference Forums He is family which means he is a family member, right? In this case,is “family” an adjective? I looked up the dictionary, found “family” as an adjective Thank you so much! Yes, you’ve hit the nail on the head! In this case, ‘family’ is indeed an adjective (only colloquially), describing him ‘as being a family member’
Remember of. . . ? | WordReference Forums Hello everybody, I know that "to remember" is supposed to be a transitive verb, but I am quite convinced to have heard the expression "remember of me" several times and it sounds a bit sweeter than "remember me" Could someone tell me if it is accepted? I have googled it and someone uses it, but
lucky that vs lucky because - WordReference Forums Hi, I would like to know if there is any difference in meaning if I use that or because, and if the sentence is overall grammatically correct Is there also any possibility to omit both and use to? I consider myself lucky that I have always known which career suits me the most I consider
subguión ( _ ) | WordReference Forums Como traduzco la palabra "subguión" al inglés? Sé que "guión" es hyphen pero dudo que subguión se traduzca sub-hyphen Gracias de antemano David
All is not well - WordReference Forums all is well all is not well formal used to say that a situation is satisfactory or not satisfactory: All is not well with their marriage Longman dictionary That was the first real warning I had that all was not well The Fellowship of the Ring by John Tolkien All is not well can only mean
Who is *Company Name* or Who are Company Name The answer here is complicated I think, Benp1994 I can’t give you a straightforward answer or even a rule to follow Nouns such as government, committee, group, team, department, family and company can be used to refer both to a whole group as a singular entity and to the members of the group So there is sometimes a case for using a plural verb rather than a singular verb, but this is
Blue gum monkey - WordReference Forums Green's Dictionary of Slang has this on 'blue gum': blue gum (med), adj — Green’s Dictionary of Slang I can't help with much of the rest of the sentence, apart from taking 'like bubbles on soap' more or less literally as a simile
Attendants vs. attendees - WordReference Forums Hello! I have a problem I'm organizing conference and at the entrance i'm putting a Welcome Canvas, but i don't know if I should use "attendants" or "attendees" what the best for this situation? and what's the difference?