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- pronunciation - How do you pronounce Lowe in Lowes - English . . .
How do you pronounce "Lowe" in "Lowe's", the home improvement store in U S ? How is it pronounced when it is in a person's name? Is it pronounced in the same way?
- grammar - Pick up someone vs Pick someone up? - English Language . . .
Oxford Learner's Dictionary provides this notation for the relevant meanings of pick up: pick somebody <-> up pick somebody something <-> up The <-> means that the word before and after can appear in reverse order Technically, in example 1 I can either "pick the baby up" or "pick up the baby "
- Capitalize fields of study? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
The University of Ottawa’s writing guide: Subject areas and disciplines Subject areas like biology, sociology, engineering, women’s studies and psychology are common nouns and don’t normally take a capital letter The University of Ottawa has programs in an array of disciplines, from mathematics and medicine to chemistry and criminology
- When should Mom and Dad be capitalized?
When you are using the word "Dad" to refer to a specific person, it's standing in place of their name, and thus, like their name, would be capitalized When you're talking about dads in general, it's a common noun
- Is it CoViD? Or COVID? Covid? How should the word be spelled?
Webster's includes no examples of acronyms that it would render in initial-cap-but-otherwise-lowercase format So even if MW weren't inclined to accept the WHO's preferred all-cap formatting of COVID-19 (which I think it would be), there is no reason to suppose that it would endorse the form Covid-19
- 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)
- python - Why is R² not equal to the square of Pearsons correlation . . .
the squared length equals ssm s s m from the solution (y^1,y^2,y^3) (y ^ 1, y ^ 2, y ^ 3) to the observation (y1,y2,y3) (y 1, y 2, y 3) the squared length equals sse s s e Because they are perpendicular the sum of their squared lengths equal the square of the length of the vector from the origin to (y1,y2,y3) (y 1, y 2, y 3)
- verbs - Can was be abbreviated as s? - English Language Usage . . .
The apostrophe + s is usually understood to mean a shortened form of is or has It would not be understood to represent a different tense of be She's at home yesterday would be read as She is at home yesterday which is incorrect (of course, the apostrophe can shorten other words as well, such as have, but that is not relevant to your question Thank you, @bib
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