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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- Item vs Product - Meaning different? - English Language Learners . . .
But if I made a list of all the rocks in my back yard, then those rocks would be items in the list, but they wouldn't be products Finding an example of a product that isn't an item is harder, but maybe something made one-of-a-kind, like, The Curiosity Mars Rover was the product of 10 years of effort at NASA
- Product list vs Products list - English Language Learners Stack . . .
Product list It is the right variant When you put the name of the list before the word "list", we use a singular Example: product list, price list, number list Or you can call list using "list of" + name of the list Example: list of products, list of prices, list of numbers
- What is the correct preposition to use for adding a product {on in at . . .
How is it correct to say: What do you think about adding "NameOfProduct" on ProductHunt com? I never know if I should use on in at
- word usage - Support to do or Support doing - English Language . . .
The word "support" is not the right word to use if you're describing a product When you're describing something that a product does, "support" is too weak or too vague
- grammaticality - has not sold vs. didnt sell - English Language . . .
Ooh, I think this may be a British vs American English issue "Has not sold" is perfectly correct, but not common in AmEng, and strikes this AmEng speaker as sounding British, where as "didn't sell" is much more idiomatic to the left of the Atlantic Any Brits care to comment?
- In formal writing, when to use bullets and when the numbers?
It depends on the approach of that items You should number the list of issues whether you want give sort by importance other you want refer to it afterwards When your only intention is to numerate the issues but you want give them the same importance and you don't refer it later or refer to these in main chapters, you might use bullets
- What does I bought out the house mean in this context?
A product or tickets to a commercial performance can sell out, but to buy out all of any such offerings never has had any currency You can only "buy out" an individual who currently owns part or all of something you want ownership control of But the "performance" here is metaphorical in the first place, and there aren't even any metaphorical "sellers" of "tickets" The fact that's
- grammaticality - Is it did you used to or did you use to? - English . . .
What question do you consider: Grammatically incorrect but common 100% grammatically correct Wrong and not common? What games or activities did you used to play during recess or after school? What
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