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- An other vs another - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
The string an other is vanishingly rare in English In contrast another is positively pervasive I think it would be fair to say that the second has eclipsed the first to the point of making the first unacceptable, even though it is a grammatical string Both an and another are members of the category of determiners, while other, on the other hand, is an adjective There's no grammatical
- 日本外务省高官 11 月 17 日访华,将解释高市早苗涉台发言,还有哪些信息值得关注? - 知乎
据日本广播协会(NHK)报道,日本外务省亚洲大洋洲局局长金井正彰将于今天(11月17日)起访问中国,预计…
- What is a less offensive synonym for retarded?
Somebody needs to rephrase the title of this question to, say: What is a better way to say, "Man, I'm so retarded" Too many people are misunderstanding the question as is
- 如何评价期刊nature water? - 知乎
We publish in the natural sciences (primarily Earth and environmental science), in engineering (including environmental, civil, chemical and materials engineering), and in the social sciences (economics, human geography and sociology, among other disciplines), with a particular interest in regards to interdisciplinary research
- Formatting two adjacent footnote indicators in the body of the . . .
1 If you want to footnote two or more separate things at one location, combine the footnotes into one, with two or more separate pieces of documentation or other information in it
- phrase requests - Any other good way of saying Happy Birthday . . .
21 Quite a few of my friends are having their birthdays in the coming weeks I feel a little awkward posting plain words like "Happy Birthday" on their Facebook pages I've decided I should come up with a different or special expression Is there any other good way of saying or implying "Happy Birthday"?
- Whats the difference between another and other?
There's a formula: another = an + other Think of it as of an article plus the word "other" that have historically merged into one word Grammar requires some article before "other book"; either "the" or "a " Depending on the context, you get either "You need to buy the other book" (if, for instance, the guy bought only the first book out of the set of two) or "You need to buy an_other book
- Is there a collective term to describe coffee and tea?
Not really, there isn't Caffeinated drinks or beverages might be more accurate, but that could include energy drinks, pre-workout supplements, a lot of other hot drinks that might contain coffee such as Mochas, etc It also becomes a problem when you introduce decaf cofffee or decaf tea Redbush tea has little to no caffeine, so this won't work While it would be technically correct and
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