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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- word usage - Participants vs Participantses - English Language Usage . . .
Pronouncing participants's is obviously "participantses" However, how to pronounce the abridged and normally written version participants', is subject to differences in preferences
- Whats the difference between attendee and participant?
Conversely, some events maintain a strict distinction between attendee and participants Say for instance, a panel discussion in front of a 1000 college students In such a case, the participants are all the people on stage, and the people watching are attendee
- grammatical number - participants or the participants - English . . .
In my opinion, it should be "the participants", since the particular participants that researchers recruited do an experiment Why do scientists write "participants" instead of "the participants"?
- Synonyms for participant - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
Is there a synonym for participant suitable for a research paper? I have seen words such as colleague, member, party, etc in various thesauruses, but these do not fit with the meaning I am trying to
- differences - Participate at vs Participate in - English Language . . .
For instance, participants in a training workshop, seminar, football gala etc When any other preposition is used, that other preposition might just be introducing an additional phrase ( or information) and in that case "in" is implied and thus taken for granted Eg participants at level two hundred performed so well
- When do I use I instead of me? - English Language Usage Stack . . .
From some comments in the answers for common English usage mistakes (now deleted, 10k only), there's confusion around the usage of I vs me: While the sentence, "the other attendees are myself and
- How to refer to a group of study participants who are not involved . . .
You can label the groups more generically, for example, The participants were divided into two groups: Group A, comprised of participants who scored above X on the suicide risk assessments, and Group B, who scored below X If you want less generic labels, you can refer to them as the high-risk and low-risk groups I prefer this approach over more specific labels, such as “outsiders
- Reschedule meeting due to the unavailability of one participant
I'd like to reschedule the meeting due to the unavailability of one of the participants He's an important element for the meeting I am looking for a sample e-mail to inform all participants that the meeting will be postponed by two hours
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