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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
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
in an email,This is John. or Im John from NY? People often overdo introductions at the start of e-mails Your name is in the From field It's also at the bottom Unless the message is more than a screen long, do not introduce yourself by name at the top If you are writing to someone who doesn't know you, get to the point You can start with something like "I am captain of the Starship Enterprise" or "I'm writing to let you know that you
One each or one of each - WordReference Forums Welcome One of each: two drinks total, for example a pint of beer and a half a cider One each: this makes sense if you are buying the drinks for yourself and a friend and you wish the barman to know that you only want one drink per person (one each), not two drinks per person (two drinks each)
talked with vs talked to | WordReference Forums This is just my subjective impression, but "talked with" always sounds "nicer" to me, like it was a more balanced, two-sided discussion - both sides were heard and considered However, Pops' "Joe and I discussed it and we are on the same page now" seems like the perfect solution That definitely sounds like a balanced, egalitarian conversation
A group of people + is are ? | WordReference Forums Collecting phrases like a number of or a pair of can make it hard to choose between is and are Which verb do you use when you’re talking about a number of people? On one hand, number is singular, which calls for is But people is plural, which calls for are Typically, it’s best to use are with a number of Correct A number of people are concerned about the lack of progress Incorrect A
To take part TO or IN or AT | WordReference Forums Hi everyone! I was writing a formal letter when I stumbled over "Take part in-at-to?? the event" now the dictionary says in, but my ears keep telling me that at sounds better as I know my ears don't mean nothing to the English grammar, I'm asking you! Thanks a lot Cheers
Thank you for your continuing continuous continued help "Thank you for your continued support" is the standard You're thanking someone for what they have done (with a slight suggestion that it would be nice if they continued Continuous suggests they supported you every step of the way, which is seldom true Continuing suggests they're going to keep supporting you, but you don't really know that – they may change their minds
someone who. . . or someone that. . . ? | WordReference Forums a )You are the one who did this b )You are the one that did this Which of the above sounds more natural in conversation?(Assuming that you are a native fluent speaker of English ) I'd like you to point out if there is any rule like we should use "who" in writing or something of the sort