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tailored for vs. tailored to | WordReference Forums Hello, Which form would sound better to a native's ear between: the system has been tailored for (this application) and the system has been tailored to (this application) ? A google fight gives millions of results for both :) Thanks!
a an specific situation - WordReference Forums Which one is correct? "a specific situation" or "an specific situation"? I know "an" normally goes with words starting with a vowel but in this case
specific to of - WordReference Forums Specific to sounds more appropriate But that comment is based on which preposition normally goes with specific, not on understanding of the sentence
on holiday vs on holidays | WordReference Forums Hello, econerd, and welcome to the forums! You're absolutely right: "Some friends and I went on holidays to Germany " "Some friends and I went on holiday to Germany " We might say 'on holidays' referring to more than one vacation: On Spanish holidays in the 70s, I used to love reclining on the beach
WordReference code-specific API implementations Let's use this thread to list any programming language-specific SDKs, client implementations or mashups of the WordReference API Implementations: AJAX SDK and Widget Please feel free to post in this thread contribute your SDK in any language of your choice, but for it to be listed here you
could- used for one specific event? | WordReference Forums Hi everyone! Many times I've come across could used to refer to one specific event, not a habit However, I was taught at the university that 'could' can only be used when we intend to talk about a habit in the past, so it is absolutely wrong to say: 'The weather was good, so we could visit my
In on July (in on + month) | WordReference Forums I'm not surprised it's been driving you crazy! For a specific date, as in your first two examples, we use 'on' For a less specific time reference, we use 'in' You may think of it arising from 'The final is in [the month of] July', The final is in [the year] 2018 Therefore, the preposition for month + year, both of which are not specific dates, is 'in' – so you say 'The WC final is in July
Capitalization when using specific insitutions - WordReference Forums Hello, I was wondering which sentence is correct in terms of capitalization of the word "bank": ABC bank, the largest bank in Europe, every year offers a generous gift to the Bank's best performing employee ABC bank, the largest bank in Europe, every year offers a generous gift to the bank's
Attendants vs. attendees - WordReference Forums If this is a conference for a specific group of people, you might use that in the welcoming sign: "Welcome Members of XYZ" "Welcome Realtors" and so forth This is the form I have seen most often