parts of speech - English Language Usage Stack Exchange I have learned English for years But I have not been good at distinguishing how different is the use of accommodation, accommodating and accommodate This is an example I mean in this question that
Difference between at and in when specifying location I am used to saying "I am in India " But somewhere I saw it said "I am at Puri (Oriisa)" I would like to know the differences between "in" and "at" in the above two sentences
expressions - English Language Usage Stack Exchange It is not incorrect (except that as tchrist noted, 2 bedroom flat should be two-bedroom flat) It is true that accommodate has a sense “To provide housing for; to furnish with something desired, needed, or convenient; as, to accommodate a friend with a loan or with lodgings” that applies
word choice - How to say: I will try to move it to an earlier time or . . . We typically say "push out" dates to mean a delay in date or time and we "pull in" dates to mean advance or "prepone" a meeting "prepone" is meaningless in English outside of India "push out" and "pull in" are accepted terms when speaking to schedulers who use any tool that creates Gantt Charts The tool automatically shows an item being pushed out to the right or pulled in to the left if you