In which order do I graph transformations of functions? Stack Exchange Network Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q A communities including Stack Overflow, the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers
prepositions - Do we say “Seek help” or “seek for help”? - English . . . It is true that people do use seek for sometimes mistakenly, but sometimes because British English There is proof that seek for is British, although the use with for is in decline: Plus, seek for is biblical: KJV Romans 2:7 To them who by patient continuance in well doing seek for glory and honour and immortality, eternal life
Do you know what IS IT? vs Do you know what IT IS? 1) Do you know what is it? 2) Do you know what it is? I kinda do a Google research on this and basically most people say it should be the first one but unfortunately the correct one is the second one Why it is so? If we refer to the rule of making question (WH-word + verb to be verb to have + subject + verb + description)
grammaticality - Does this vs Is this (grammar) - English Language . . . You can't use is because do is the auxiliary verb we use when forming questions From the Cambridge Grammar website: Do is one of three auxiliary verbs in English: be, do, have We use do to make negatives (do + not), to make question forms, and to make the verb more emphatic
Can we or could we? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange Do both sentences express permission? Not necessarily Context will provide the answer The second sentence is clearly a request for permission, but the first could be asking about what one is able to do Say, if the previous question was "What is a dictionary for?" But there's a third word often used for permission: may
Difference between ≈, ≃, and ≅ - Mathematics Stack Exchange Real life triangles use approximations and have rounding errors 3 4 does not equal 3 1 4 1 but could be rough approximations for something already constructed As such this is not a popular use and purists and rigorous math profs disdain it because they do not have a way of using it or defining it soundly
Hello, This is vs My Name is or I am in self introduction Stack Exchange Network Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q A communities including Stack Overflow, the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers
How do I choose between as to, on, of, and about? Right, they aren't exact synonyms, and it's all pretty idiomatic So no hard-and-fast rules, no In 1, "news of whether" does not really work and would have to be reworded as "news of the possibility that" instead I would say
How to know when to put calculator in radian or degree mode? The technically correct thing to do is to assume that everything is in radians unless otherwise specified However, humans tend to be bad at being technically correct, so if you haven't been told to use radians unless otherwise specified I would consider making contextual judgement calls