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- grammaticality - Monthly and annual as descriptors - English . . .
Because the adjective forms of year and month, are annual and monthly respectively, which is what you are using with the noun service The adverb forms are annually and monthly, which are used with the verb billed
- Is there a word which means having a frequency of decades or per . . .
17 I have a document with the headings: daily, weekly, monthly, yearly, and decadely Google Chrome, Google Docs, and Dictionary com insist that "decadely" is not a word Furthermore, deacadely sounds and looks weird to me Is there a word I am unaware of which captures this meaning?
- time - Whats the Best English word for 6 months in this group: daily . . .
While one question could be about what does bi- stand for, my question is what better one word is there for 6 months like daily, weekly, monthly, quarterly My guess it there might be one that I don't know of
- On the first of every month vs. every first of the month
The difference is that the first is a prepositional phrase and the second is a noun phrase There's nothing illogical about the second one Nor is there any reason to hyphenate it beyond stylistic preference It's just a different way to say the thing, but everyone would understand it: "On the first of every month I like to go out and buy a new hat" "Every first of the month I like to go out
- meaning - Biweekly, bimonthly, biannual, and bicentennial: dual . . .
What do lengths of time with the "bi" prefix mean"? I have understood bicentennial as once every two hundred years, but biannual as meaning twice a year Do biweekly and bimonthly mean twice a week
- single word requests - Monthly , bi-monthly , quarterly and - English . . .
Monthly , bi-monthly , quarterly and [duplicate] Ask Question Asked 11 years, 8 months ago Modified 11 years, 8 months ago
- Is there any difference between monthly average and average per . . .
I have trouble understanding if I should use "monthly average" or "average per month" when asking someone to calculate monthly average of a variable, e g heating expenses Is there any difference,
- Best term in worldwide English for a monthly cost?
Maybe some people use the Latin phrase per mensem that way, or perhaps just "monthly" (as a noun, as in "I have to pay my monthly") But you asked for the "most accurate, known, day-to-day" expression, which is certainly "monthly cost" or one of its variants
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