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!
|
- Use of as per vs per - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
I've read and have heard of both 'as per' and 'per' being used conversationally, both with the same connotation of either 'according to' or 'on authority of' Examples: "Tell Ron to start molding
- meaning - Difference between per and a - English Language Usage . . .
What is the difference between the following two sentences? She goes to the forest three times per week She goes to the forest three times a week
- Usage of “as per” - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
I changed the image as my boss suggested There is a mistaken assumption here that as per has a valid usage It doesn’t; it’s just one in common use, and is valid only by that sole metric alone As per is always redundant; you don’t ever need the superflous as portion of the phrase Indeed, the OED says that as per usual is “humorous
- By vs Per. Which one should I use on expressions like P L . . .
The word "per" carries the implication (as in percent) that there is a division going on - so if someone says to me "I'll tell you the number of widgets manufactured per employee" I'm expecting one number - the total number of widgets manufactured divided by the number of employees
- meaning - What does Per [persons name] mean? - English Language . . .
The room costs 40 € per person In this case, per has a meaning for for each This matches with the main question as asked in the topic title, but doesn't with the example given in the thread itself: per John, as you never charge something per John, haha There's another case where per would fit both your examples Like this:
- What is the difference between as per and according to?
The particular construction as per my knowledge is unnatural - as per is normally only used in reference to some prior statement school of thought It more properly corresponds to in accordance with, and can't simply be used to replace the idiomatic according to my knowledge information understanding
- What is the difference between Per year and Per annum?
This still leaves teachers $3,000 per year short of accountants, $17,000 short of computer systems analysts, and $25,000 short of engineers These example sentences are representative of the most common uses of these two phrases and, as one can see, there is no real difference between per annum and per year in usage
- grammar - Usage of “per”, “each” and every? - English Language . . .
"per" generally means an averaging One may study for 5 hours one week, and 15 the next, and achieve 10 hours per week "each" generally means either an equal distribution, or a minimum, or both Studying 10 hours each week would mean at least 10 hours every week
|
|
|