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安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
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- Correspond to vs. Correspond with - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
Is there any significant difference between Correspond to and Correspond with? I only mean in the sense of "matching", here, rather than "communication" I've looked at a few sources, but I can't
- meaning - Corresponding vs. appropriate - English Language Usage . . .
I would suggest looking up the word "correspond" in a dictionary to start with It has another meaning which has nothing to do with letter-writing "Corresponding" is a more specific relationship than "appropriateness", and so could be a better choice in your cases
- punctuation - What is the proper way of using triple dots and spaces . . .
Note that at least one important US style does sometimes put a space before four dots (as well as between and after): specifically, legal "Blue Book" style specifies four dots with a leading space when a quotation cuts off the end of one sentence, and then continues with another sentence So a regularly spaced ellipsis (3 dots, spaces before, after, and between) is then followed by a period
- Correct usage of replacing cuss words with symbols
I've noticed sometimes there isn't a specific number of symbols but normally the number of symbols correspond to the number of letters in the cuss word E g : Wow dude, you are such an #%-hole!
- With who vs. with whom - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
Is this correct? The person with whom I'm doing the project should be here soon If it is, is with always a dative preposition (like mit in German)?
- Difference in meaning between did you speak to. . . and have you spoken . . .
Possible Duplicate: How do the tenses in English correspond temporally to one another? What's the difference in meaning between "Did you speak to the landlord this morning?" and "Have you spoke
- Free of vs. Free from - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
Hello, Dee "So 'free from' is used to indicate protection from something problematic, and 'free of' (which doesn't correspond neatly to 'freedom of') is used to indicate the absence of something: this shampoo is free of parabens " (1) assumes states without support that 'free from' and 'freedom from' correspond closely semantically and (2) would be more felicitously rendered "So 'free from
- pronunciation - Could you clarify e and ɛ ? - English Language . . .
They correspond to the same phoneme, which may be written either e or ɛ , depending on the dictionary (and sometimes inconsistently in the same dictionary, with e when followed by ɪ and with ɛ otherwise): there are no words, contrary to French, distinguished only by this sound
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