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English notation for hour, minutes and seconds If you use them, be prepared for some strange looks The best option is hh:mm:ss If you're only showing a pair of digits, the context will tell the reader whether it's hh:mm or mm:ss You can also suffix the digits with the unit, such as 1h 12m 23s but this gets long and if you're aligning many such intervals it can be difficult to compare
articles - Rule for using the with nationality - English Language . . . I think your teacher, might have been referring to adjectives used to represent a distinct population For example, the Swiss, the Japanese, the French, and the Irish, but the same is true for any nationality: the Brazilians, the Swedes, the Germans etc Maybe the lesson was focussed on nationalities ending with "sh", "se" (S sound), "ss" and "ch" because the plural form of NOUNS ending with
surnames - Correct transliteration of foreign Names with umlauts and . . . The German ß becomes ss (although the Swiss don't use ß) How does it look with other languages such as Celtics, French, Polish, Swedish and so on? For example, how would the Swedish name Håkan be written in English if there is no å? Umlauts and other diacritics are usually transliterated in the machine-readable part of a passport
When to pronounce ‹s› as z in the middle of words? Other miscellaneous exceptions: The -ss- in the American state name Missouri is also exceptionally pronounced z In raspberry, the p is silent and the [s] assimilates to the b , so is voiced to z