安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
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- What is the correct term back-end, back end or backend?
The Ngram is misleading, as back end can refer to the literal back end of a town, or a house, or other things where you would not use backend Pairing it with developer or software or some such would be a closer approximation
- I have made all the changes VS I made all the changes
Both convey the same information and meaning and in many situations could be substituted for one another quite comfortably However they do both stress slightly different things and a fluent English speaker would likely use one or the other for a specific reason: I have made all the changes and filled out the document log in the last page The inclusion of "have" in the first sentence
- What do you call a mock project in developer internship?
Some IT companies offer internships where would-be developer employees build a project It may be quite complex, involve dozens of people on the team (backend, frontend, BAs, MQAs, AQAs, PMs, POs,
- $x USD vs. x USD: does the $ serve any purpose?
USD CAD AUD is the way to go for technical documents or backend databases For catalog pages, a good solution is to use $ in the price field and somewhere else on the page put an indication of currency and locale, like "USD" and the flag, since you're also indicating a willingness to ship to that place
- compounds - correct use of hyphens to connect two words - English . . .
Should I use a hyphen to connect the following words? What is the general rule about that? environment friendly --> environment-friendly frontend --> front-end backend --> back-end
- Unable to speak like humans - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
As a joke, perhaps Otherwise, no The meaning of "speechless" (as you can confirm in your favourite dictionary) is "temporarily unable to speak, due to shock, surprise etc " Mute tends to mean "unable to make a sound" (Unprompted, my daughter said "I don't like dogs when they bark; I want a mute dog ") I'd just say "It can't talk" or in this context "It can't tell you to stop " etc It isn't
- There is or there are with compound subjects that have a mix of . . .
There is a cat, a dog, and an elephant in the room There are two cats, a dog, and an elephant in the room There is a cat, two dogs, and an elephant in the room In the first sentence, all of these
- usage of the but-a phrase - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Avoid the usage in your first two examples - it's dated poetic, bordering on archaic We use just or only (or feasibly simply, merely, purely, ) in such contexts today The "negative polarity" examples 3 4, where but effectively means except, are fine
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