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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- If you send an email that you already sent, can you say you resent it . . .
I resent my email I resent my mother I resent my email to my mother Odd, isn't it?
- The ambiguity of: resent your message - English Language Usage . . .
Compare this to other cases in which "to resent" could be grammatically correct: I resent your message This is ambiguous between the two options: The present tense of "to resent" => "Today, I am offended by your message" The past tense of "to resend" => "Yesterday, I sent your message again" I have resented your message
- word usage - Difference between grudge and resentment - English . . .
We resent things all the time, but generally let them go; if we hold onto the offense and our reaction to it, then we are holding a grudge
- meaning - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
Additionally, Dictionary com specifically offers "to envy or resent the pleasure or good fortune of (someone)" Sounds rather spot on
- Whats the difference between envy and resent?
What's the difference between envy and resent? envy painful or resentful awareness of an advantage enjoyed by another joined with a desire to possess the same advantage Envy is the feeling you have when you wish you could have the same thing or quality that someone else has
- politeness - How to reply to I hope you are well? - English Language . . .
How to appropriately respond to someone saying quot;I hope you are well ? quot; There are certain situations in writing where this would obviously not be soliciting a response (requiring a full s
- Does chronological order mean the most recent item comes first?
In technical and common parlance, the phrase "chronological order" indicates that the items are in order of occurrence or creation, oldest first (being the first in the chronology) So it's [ 1997, 1998, 1999 ] and not [ 1999, 1998, 1997 ] Ordering most recent first as in the example given in the question is called reverse chronological ordering or inverse chronological ordering
- Regarding Re: ; what is the correct usage in an email subject line?
I want to know what is the recommended way to use Re: in the subject line of an email I use Re: in the subject line as a shortform of 'in regards to' Whenever I have used Re:, people have told me
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