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a rite of passage - English Language Learners Stack Exchange Strictly speaking, a rite of passage is a ceremony marking a person's transition into a new phase of life (a tribal initiation, confirmation or bar mitzvah, university graduation)
word choice - In or on the newspaper notebook - English Language . . . Content is in a newspaper or notebook, but on things that belong to the newspaper or notebook If an object is on a newspaper or notebook, it is a physically separate object that is physically resting above the newspaper or notebook My picture was on the front page of the newspaper My picture was in the newspaper The article was in the newspaper I read the article on the newspaper's
Whats the proper style to write a companys name followed by Inc? When it comes to the legal documents, I think a persistent style is preferred A check put in the name of Facebook, Inc may get declined if they find the company name Facebook Inc as registered
presume not God to scan” – what does it mean? Could you help me understand it, please? The passage is: Know then thyself, presume not God to scan, The proper study of mankind is Man The part that I don't understand is "presume not God to scan" As far as I understand, it means "Don't think about God you could deeply research him" But I am not exactly sure
grammar - What is passive participle? - English Language Learners . . . From Wikipedia Participles may also be identified with a particular voice: active or passive Some languages (such as Latin and Russian) have distinct participles for active and passive uses In English, the present participle is essentially an active participle, while the past participle has both active and passive uses The following examples illustrate this: I saw John eating his dinner
plural forms - As follows vs as follow - English Language Learners . . . 'As follows' means 'as described in the passage that follows this' What comes next, usually in the form of a list For example, Mary planned her day as follows: returning all phone calls; a department meeting; lunch with her colleagues; library research This term is always put in the singular (“follows”) even though it applies to numerous items and is frequently followed by a colon It
Nice read Nice reading [closed] - English Language Learners Stack . . . It is what teachers write on children's reports when they have read well out loud - "Nice reading!" However, in some contexts a passage of text that is intended to be read out loud can also be referred to as " a reading", and so it would not be completely out of place to say " that was an enjoyable reading " in reference to the text itself
A bit confused between , citing and by citing The passage says that Auerbach "makes a compelling argument"; he has something of his own to say These old planning records are evidence, but they aren't "arguments" themselves
Can I write the word mother-in-law as mother in law or mother in-law? Not all compound nouns require hyphenation, however, "mother-in-law" does require hyphenation to avoid ambiguity Without hyphenation, it could mean that your mother works in the field of law: I have a brother in banking and a mother in law Your other suggestion of partial hyphenation doesn't really make any sense Compound nouns should either be hyphenated or not
What does it refer to? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange (The original that the test passage is the article Advertisements: The Pros and Cons ) Money spent on advertising is money well spent It assists a rapid distribution of goods at reasonable price What I am confused about is what does "it" refer to? Money spent on advertising Advertising My opinion is 'Advertising'