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- Is it improper English to read the number 1100 as eleven hundred?
For numbers between 1000 and 9999 is it proper English for the word "hundred" to be used? For example is it necessarily wrong to say "eleven hundred" when referring to 1100?
- Commas in plurals of numbers (1000s vs. 1,000s) in web writing
Would I use a comma within the number 1,000 when expressing it as a plural? For example: The laboratory contained 100s or even 1,000s of rats vs The laboratory contained 100s or even 1000s of
- single word requests - Precise names for parts of a day - English . . .
The time after 12 00 and 15 00 - afternoon; 12 00 exactly is NOON - meal after 1100 until 1500 is lunch) Any thing, i e , tea coffee any beaverage except hard drinks with snacks - tea (before 5 00 pm)
- grammar - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
I have already learned what is the general difference between conjunctions and conjuncting pronouns, and that is the fact that a pronoun can be a subject or an object in the clause whereas a conjun
- What is difference between timetable and schedule?
I'm confused as to what is the correct word for it: schedule or timetable? What should I call it? Here is the result of GitHub search for different queries: university timetable - 359 university schedule - 742 students timetable - 329 students schedule - 1100 word-choice word-usage personal-names meaning Improve this question edited Mar 11
- How did *Old* English transform into *Middle* English so quickly?
The Wessex standard abruptly lost its status after the conquest; from about 1100 to 1400, there was no standard written English; texts from that time basically show the language as the authors spoke it
- Is it proper grammar to refer to four digit number in hundreds?
Sometimes you will hear people refer to four digit numbers in terms of hundreds For example, sometimes people will say fifteen hundred when talking about the number 1500 Is this proper? What ar
- Comma separator for numbers with 4 or 5 digits?
Oddly, they say that “a 1,100-percent increase” and “an 1100-percent increase” are both acceptable They don’t explain; I guess the rationale is that “1,100” would be pronounced “one thousand one hundred” and “1100” would be pronounced “eleven hundred”
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