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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- differences - Interfere in vs. interfere with - English Language . . .
To interfere in [noun phrase], and to interfere with [noun phrase] differ adverbially as in [noun phrase] and with [noun phrase] are adverbial prepositional modifiers We can imagine other examples such as "to interfere quickly" and "to interfere unhelpfully" Any difference therefore occurs because of the nuance of the preposition
- Whats the difference between intervene and interfere?
To interfere can mean to restrain, while intervene more leans towards to come between (lat inter: between, venire: come), to engage Interfere comes from lat fere : to do One could say that interfere means to go between to do something, to restrain, disrupt, disturb with a focus on the doing part, the action that is done, while intervene
- Is there a synonym for intefere that has a positive connotation?
Interfere is defined by the Cambridge Online Dictionary as: to involve yourself in a situation when your involvement is not wanted or is not helpful I am looking for a word that has essentially the same meaning but does not have the negative connotation of "not helpful "
- ambiguity - Question on a job application form - English Language . . .
The question is not necessarily ambiguously worded, but it may be intended to see just how closely the applicant reads Seldom letting one's responsibilities interfere with having fun would that most of the time when a friend calls to say he want's to go somewhere on a workday, you decline the friends offer and go to work
- Why does the multi-paragraph quotation rule exist?
The lack of closing quotation marks is a convenient clue for the reader that the quotation goes on beyond the end of the paragraph
- terminology - What do you call one who believes in a higher power but . . .
Those two sentences sound like two different questions The first sounds like a non-Abrahamic monotheist (Muslims believe in the god of the Christian Old Testament (also Jews) but usually call them Allah rather than God; I don't know if they are included in you first sentence)
- Whats a phrase for a compromise in which both sides are unhappy?
@DawoodibnKareem A “split-the-baby negotiation” today is a real compromise Even in the original story, telling both women that they could get half of the baby was a putative compromise, just one so horrific that the arbitrator did not expect it to actually happen, and only proposed it to get the parties to back down from their intractable positions
- grammar - When to use lives as a plural of life? - English Language . . .
I am confused when talking about a general idea using "our life" when sometimes I feel like using "our lives" Please tell me the correct answer with appropriate explanation
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