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!
|
- equipment or equipments? - WordReference Forums
Equipments is used in the automotive industry a great deal to talk about optional elements for a car offer (like electric windows, or Pro-level: refrigerated compartments, dump truck beds, hatchbacks, etc)
- grammatical number - What is the plural of equipment? - English . . .
These electronic equipments have so many advantages over the conventional instruments in terms of accuracy as well as speed Though these equipments have much higher costs as compared to conventional surveying equipments However if survey fieldwork cost and time is also included, then it is worth to purchase these costly equipments
- equipment or equipments - WordReference Forums
Sorry to displease here, but I am afraid I disagree Strictly speaking, "equipment" is singular; it is uncountable (i e an uncountable noun that always takes the singular) Hence, you do not say: "We have two equipments in our office", but: "We have two pieces of equipment in our office - a PC and a scanner "
- Plural nouns - WordReference Forums
1 I think you can't say these equipments, nor these equipment, so you should say the equipment, a lot of equipment, or many pieces of euipment instead? Singular: This piece of equipment, Plural: The equipment {Uncountable} or This equipment {uncountable}, the pieces of equipment 2 The Google search shows the following results
- Number of equipment - WordReference Forums
Hi I know that the noun 'equipment' is a mass noun But is it okay to say 'the number of equipment' to refer to the quantity of equipment pieces? The following is a sentence from EUR-Lex — Access to European Union law — choose your language Thus, a compulsory mechanism for MS's contributions
- Word that includes laptop, tablet, smartphone etc
Although I agree with Brian Hitchcock that "portable electronic devices" is a much broader category than might be desirable for the range of devices that the OP is interested in describing, it (or its short form, portables) is the one that the computer magazines where I've worked have settled on to describe the relevant category
- It has been a long time since we contacted each other
Thanks The "been" was left out, I have corrected After I search the goole with "It has been a long time since", I find that most examples are this: it has been a long tiem since+past tense
- Electronic vs. electric - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
@mins I think there are two main rules of thumb people use to distinguish between electric and electronic: first is as what Pitarou has said, whether the system uses electricity as just a source of energy (solely to convert electric energy into some other energy), or uses it to control things process information
|
|
|