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  • pronouns - Something for anyone vs Something for everyone - English . . .
    6 "Something for everyone" is an idiom or fixed phrase meaning something that appeals to all tastes Idioms can bypass strict definitions of words or grammar rules; the meaning comes from the entire expression and it can't be broken into logical parts
  • Is it Guide to. . . or Guide on. . . or something else?
    Have you tried looking at similar publications? Is this within a corporate or academic environment? "Guide to" is certainly most common but there may be local stylistic quirks
  • prepositions - provide something for or to sb - English Language . . .
    With transitive provide sth to for sb, I think answer 2 is closer - to is more about giving or handing off something to someone, while for is more about something being made available to someone
  • phrasal verbs - Is it natural to use the phrase run something by . . .
    Nah, I think your original idea is correct - to " run something by " someone is to get their opinion, reaction or permission I don't know where you've heard it as a bare transfer of information, but that seems wrong There's always the implication that you want a response from the person who you're running something by There are many options to express the transfer of information, many of
  • usage of a something in the sentence - English Language Learners . . .
    This requires the author to distinguish between the word something, particular entities which the word something may designate, and the set of entities to which the word something may refer In your sentence the author is referring to #3: a something is some particular member of the set ‘something’
  • Be the first to do something vs. be the first to have done something
    Could you tell what is the difference between be the first to do something and be the first to have done something? For example: The country is the first to use nuclear power The country is the f
  • subject verb agreement - Is something plural or singular? - English . . .
    Something is a pronoun, which is analogous to "a thing", that is an indefinite pronoun "A an" is the Old English for "one" and one implies singularity Thus, I found a thing that wasn't working I found something that wasn't working are the same in meaning, but 'something' is the commonly used version To pluralise your sentence, I would say: "Some things that are not working " "Some things
  • What do you call a person who suggested something? A suggester?
    A client suggests something (actually, an edit to an existing item or a proposal for a new item) and I need to have two variables to refer to the following: The client that suggested the thing The id of the client who suggested the thing I couldn't just use Client and ClientId because it would be ambiguous in this particular situation


















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