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- Usage of + or ++ in emails - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
I would agree with instinct71 It's used as follows: - say an email is sent to a list of recipients, but someone was omitted or the topic needs to include other recipient (s) The new recipient (s) are added to the To: or CC: fields and their names are also added to the body of the email with a ++ or + , just to inform everyone on the current distribution that others have been added to the
- Word to describe someone who is ignorant of societal problems
Answers without enough detail may be edited or deleted I need a word that describes someone who advocates for harmful laws or policies; it would describe someone who writes policy without listening to the people it affects or someone who doesn't pay attention to actual effects of that policy, kind of like politically or socially tone-deaf
- Is there a word for someone who says prayers?
The word means "someone who requests something," and it can indeed be applied to people who ask God for something in prayer However, there are also prayers of praise, and prayers of thankgiving, and I don't think it would be accurate to call someone a supplicant if the person was only offering a prayer of thanks
- Word for someone with no responsibilities assigned to them?
12 Concept What is the word for someone who has no responsibility? I am meaning a situation where someone lacks anything to be responsible for Adjusting Google Oxfords' meaning of "responsibility" to try and make the concept more clear: The state or fact of having no duty to deal with anything or of having no control over anyone
- word request - When someone, instead of listening, makes assumptions . . .
Thus, when you describe someone’s concerns as a “boogeyman,” you’re dismissing them, saying that they are childish or unrealistic fears This is similar to lidérc, in that it’s a reference to a creature from folklore and used to emphasize the un-reality of something
- idioms - Filled in for someone meaning - English Language Learners . . .
What does filled in for someone mean exactly? An example of a sentence with the idiom: While you were off, I filled in for you Does it mean the author of that sentence took over my duties entir
- How do you answer when someone asks you to do something?
When someone asks you politely to do something and you want to do it, how do you answer? I was using "ok", but it seemed too general and thought about "of course"
- If you are talking on behalf of you and someone else, what is the . . .
I looked at a bunch of style guides to see what they have to say on this subject The vast majority of them dedicate at least a paragraph to the distinction (or nondistinction) between "in behalf of" and "on behalf of"—but not one addresses the question of how to handle "on behalf of" when used by a speaker to refer to another person and to him- or herself This silence leads me to believe
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