Was The F Word in common usage in the 1800s? The usage of the “F”word as well as other swear words appears to be exaggerated and not historically correct, but effective from a fictional point of view as noted in the following extract by American lexical semantician and author Geoffrey Nunberg: If you have your characters use historically accurate swear words, they're apt to sound no more offensive than your grandmother in a mild snit
provide vs. provide with - English Language Usage Stack Exchange The verb provide has two different subcategorisation frames: provide something [ to somebody] provide somebody with something In the first, the material provided is the object, in the second the recipient is the object Both are valid, and both are in common use The difference between them is the with phrase, which must be there to get meaning 2: if there is only one (direct) object, then
Another word for ensure but less absolute The word promote is less absolute than ensure, but it won't fit your sentence What would make your sentence make sense would be to drop the and and insert so that The lesser level of certainty will be carried over from the earlier phrase hope to make I hope to make universal design the standard practice so that no person feels excluded from an activity, commodity, or opportunity due to a
Acronyms and Initialisms- Uppercase, Lowercase, or either Is there a rule on acronyms and initialisms being spelled out with the first letter of each word being uppercase or lowercase? Example: interim final rule (IFR) Interim Final Rule (IFR)