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安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
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- grammatical number - These include or This includes - English . . .
I am writing a user manual and am stuck upon these include and this includes Do I use This includes when there is only one thing involved? For example, "This includes normal users" and "This inclu
- Is or are, Include or includes? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
Reported in Panel B is or are fund information, which include or includes the number of funds and managers Can someone kindly help with the grammar in this sentence Which is actually is the subje
- differences - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
I know that include is a verb while including is a preposition but they made me confuse when it comes to their usage I usually confuse when to use include with including Most Thais like sp
- meaning - Include vs involve: usage and difference - English . . .
The bill includes tax and service Tax and service are included in the bill [ + -ing verb ] Your responsibilities will include making appointments on my behalf And this definition of involve: involve verb [ T not continuous ] If an activity, situation, etc involves something, that thing is a part of the activity, etc ; and also
- Punctuation for the phrase including but not limited to
When using the phrase quot;including but not limited to quot;, how should it be punctuated? When used in the following (no punctuation): There are many activities including but not limited to run
- grammaticality - To include vs. including - English Language . . .
In the hot story of today (the U S Senate report on "Enhanced Interrogation Techniques"), I noticed the following: He was subjected to numerous and repeated torture techniques, to include being
- include vs included when referring to a category from the past
0 Your intuition is fine here "Include" works best when it refers to a state that still exists In this case, the category of "TV shows from the 80s "is a currently-existing category, like "TV shows that star a child actor" or "films that have lasers in them," so the present tense form include encompasses what that category currently includes
- grammatical number - Menu of services include or . . . includes . . .
Most likely, you want includes The subject, "menu", is singular: A menu includes You wouldn't say, a menu include So the noun phrase "of services" is merely misleading here If you were talking about services, you'd use the plural: services include But you only have one menu in this sentence
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