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  • At or in the mirror? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    In would be used when you are looking at something in the mirror, i e , you are looking at the reflection For example: He looked in the mirror to check out the haircut At would be used if you are looking at the mirror itself or the fixture around the mirror, e g , the mirror frame or the quality of the glass, and not at the reflection For
  • Whats the correct preposition for the verb to mirror something.
    Mirror the geometry across the user-provided plane You might also consider using reflect instead of mirror , since the former more often has an object of a preposition I'm not sure if using reflect would make this sentence more clear to your reader, but that replacement makes it more clear that about and across are better choices as the preposition for "user-provided plane"
  • A comma between the subject and the verb? What kind of English . . .
    Lewis and Brooks-Gunn (1979) suggest that infants’ developing understanding that the movements they see in the mirror are contingent on their own, leads to a growing awareness that they are distinct from other people In this sentence, the bolded part is the subject of the first that-clause, with leads being the corresponding verb Why is
  • Is there a clear distinction between rear view and back view?
    Rear view typically means looking toward the back, either directly or indirectly (even though you might not be facing the back) The "rear view mirror" in a car enables the driver to look toward the back while still facing front It's also used figuratively when referring to things that happened in the past
  • prepositions - Difference between with and to - English Language . . .
    Stack Exchange Network Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q A communities including Stack Overflow, the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers
  • lyrics - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    The gavotte is a slow showy dance and implies the person is walking in a way that they expect to be noticed, they have brief time to acknowledge others in the room with short conversations and clearly intent on making an impression And they would be looking in the mirror to see how wonderful they are
  • What does the phrase that checks out mean here?
    You are performing a check using the side mirror; you are checking the mirror for traffic The use of the idiom here is fairly informal and imprecise, but not wrong The use of "checks" rather than "check" is simply subject-verb agreement with the indicative pronoun "that," which is the subject of the clause I check You check
  • Using Did should it be followed by past or present tense verb?
    Did he wake up this morning and look in the mirror and notice his eyebags are puffier than ever? Notice how it says wake, look, and notice These are the infinitive forms If you tried to use the present tense, it would be ungrammatical: Did he *wakes up this morning and *looks in the mirror and *notices his eyebags are puffier than ever?


















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