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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- Fulfil vs. Fulfill – What’s the Difference? - Writing Explained
Fulfil and fulfill are spelling variants of the same verb, which means to realize, achieve, or bring something to fruition Fulfil is the British English variant
- Fulfil vs. Fulfill - Grammarly
Fulfil vs fulfill—what’s the difference? We use fulfill to say that we did something we promised, that we carried out a duty, or that we realized or put into effect something that someone entrusted us to do
- FULFIL | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
FULFIL definition: 1 to do something that is expected, hoped for, or promised, or to cause it to happen: 2 to… Learn more
- Fulfil vs. fulfill - GRAMMARIST
Fulfill is the American spelling of the verb meaning to accomplish or to satisfy Fulfil is the preferred spelling outside North America Both forms are common in Canadian writing The spelling preferences extend to fulfilment and fulfillment, but not to fulfilled, fulfilling, and fulfiller, which have two l ’s everywhere
- FULFIL definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary
If you fulfil something such as a promise, dream, or hope, you do what you said or hoped you would do The president fulfilled his promise of announcing a date for the referendum [VERB noun] To fulfil a task, role, or requirement means to do or be what is required, necessary, or expected
- ‘Fulfill’ or ‘Fulfil’: What’s the Difference?
Both fulfill and fulfil carry the same meaning: to achieve or carry out a particular goal, duty, or wish These verbs imply the successful completion or realization of one’s aims or promises
- fulfil - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
fulfil (third-person singular simple present fulfils, present participle fulfilling, simple past and past participle fulfilled) British English standard spelling of fulfill It is recorded that this remarkable prophecy, now largely fulfilled, was received with much merriment—an undeserved fate
- Fulfil vs. Fulfill — What’s the Difference?
Fulfil is the spelling commonly used in British English, reflecting the general preference for single consonants in certain words in UK style guides Whereas fulfill is the standard in American English, which often doubles the final consonant before a suffix
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