copy and paste this google map to your website or blog!
Press copy button and paste into your blog or website.
(Please switch to 'HTML' mode when posting into your blog. Examples: WordPress Example, Blogger Example)
Still lifes versus still lives? - WordReference Forums In the noun "still life" life is not use in the sense that has a plural (as in "people's lives") but means "something that has life" or "a form of life" (e g "bacteria are a lower form of life") In this sense life doesn't have a plural: we don't call forms of life (living things) lives
still life - WordReference Forums If STILL LIFE is used as an adjective - for example "a still life image reproduced in oil paint" - should a hyphen be used as it sometimes is to form a
in our life vs. in our lives? - WordReference Forums If you use "life", you are using the uncountable noun meaning "the state and experience of being alive" This is something that we all share, as in "Life is wonderful" If you use the plural form, you are speaking of the separate lives of individuals, as in "The lives of the peasants were filled with hard work " (crossposted)
Does it effect me? vs. Does it affect me? - WordReference Forums Your question is too wide I think you have to decide whether you want to talk about the two nouns or the two verbs Instead of us inventing examples, it would be easir for you to find real-life examples and then ask us questions about them Otherwise we are simply writing an essay for you to read You could start with the two sentences you
cove--a perfectly aimiable cove - WordReference Forums ‘he is a perfectly amiable cove’ Decent hard-working coves with families to support are out of work, while the bloody company chairmen are still leading the good life in Rose Bay and Potts Inlaws and Outlaws - Page 63 - Google Books Result Kathleen James - 2015 - Family
Antonym of Virtual Meeting | WordReference Forums "Physical", "in-person", "real-life" and "face-to-face" (especially if there are only two people) could all work But real-life meetings are still the norm though this current period is an exception, so you could just say "meeting" and specify "online" or "virtual" if it was one
Im busy lately. Ive been busy lately. more appropriate one Dear all, I got your letter two weeks ago I've been trying to find time to write you back, but I'm very busy lately I made the sentences Which is the more appropriate expression for the bolded part, I'm very busy lately or I've been very busy lately? Thank you in advance
never saw vs. have never seen | WordReference Forums Present perfect: We are at have gone to a restaurant (we're still there) I have eaten mussels What's the difference? In the first one, we've left the restaurant There's no possibility that mussels or anything else will be eaten in the future in the context of this restaurant trip In the second one, we're still at the restaurant There is a
have been have been being - WordReference Forums He felt as though he had been fooled all of his life That could be a single event rather than a series of events For example, he was told he was an orphan, but eventually discovers that his father is doing life in prison for murdering his mother He felt as though he had been being fooled all of his life He was frequently fooled in a myriad
chance of at - WordReference Forums Still more thoughts Further internet searching produces examples fromn the UK of the expressions 'a chance at life' and 'a chance at love' Therefore I must admit that it is an accepted usage However, I think it is really only suitable for cases similar to those What does 'a chance at' in such cases really mean?