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Why there are two different meanings for triweekly? 1 Why there are two different meanings for “triweekly”? It's almost as though the language evolved rather than being properly designed Is there another word to indicate a period of exactly 3 weeks? Yes, "three-weekly" And for the other meaning (three times a week): "thrice-weekly"
punctuation - What is the proper way of using triple dots and spaces . . . The Three-Dot Method, which uses three ellipsis points to indicate all omissions of text from quoted extracts, "is appropriate for most general works and many scholarly ones," according to Chicago The Three-or-Four-Dot Method, Chicago says, "is appropriate for poetry and most scholarly works other than legal writings or textual commentary "
Equivalent of both when referring to three or more items? What would be the correct word to use when referring to three or more items, in the same manner as the word both? For example, using two words, with the word both: "There are several recommendat
Scattered Spider: Three things the news doesn’t tell you So here’s three things that you might have missed — some you probably know already, and others that you might not be aware of if you haven’t been tracking Scattered Spider beyond the recent
Whats the best way to use either on more than two options? However, he didn't mention that what is the best alternative to "either" in three or more options in formal context, and hence I posted this question here So, on the situation where there are multiple options possible, how should I express my sentence?
What does three by and five by mean? - English Language Usage . . . It teaches the target language using English On a page of vocabulary and phrases, it lists the English terms "three by" and "five by" I can't understand the foreign translation, and there is no context from which to guess the meaning Are these voice procedures for use on a radio? What is the meaning? And is there also "one by", "two by", etc ?
Which is right — all the three or all three in a situation of . . . All three cars already implies that you are referring to specific cars; you don't need the article to clarify that these aren't just any cars I would say that your best options are all three cars, three of the cars, or each of [the] three cars, depending on the context
Why is it three score years and ten almost half the time and not . . . 3 Why is it 'three score years and ten' almost half the time and not always 'three score and ten years'? Note: I edited the question body and title in light of comments and answers pointing me to a Google phrase frequency chart which indicates that the two versions are used about equally often right now