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  • Filled completed - WordReference Forums
    Hello, I filled out a document This document has to be sent by email In my email, I say please find attached the completed document or please find attached the document filled It's neither an application form nor a file It's just a document with a few questions in it I don't know which
  • I filled fill lt;in, out gt; an application form. - WordReference Forums
    Anything you "fill out" is a form This would mean that both options in (1) are correct And, with the exception of the typo in the word "jub", I would omit the word "position" from (2) - I filled out an application for a job I applied for a job
  • Filled with or filled of? - WordReference Forums
    You want "filled with " For some reason we say "full of " but "filled with " I wonder whether that is why you were puzzled
  • filled form or completed form - WordReference Forums
    Hello, my friends, I was wondering which expression is idiomatic or is there a better choice: 1) I will send you the completed form 2) I will send you the filled form Thoughts: My first choice is #2, but I don't consider it idiomatic I forgot to send a email attached with a form need to
  • to be filled with by - WordReference Forums
    Hello, to be filled with by -All the seats in the concert area were filled by with people Which preposition is used after the verb 'fill' in the example above? The reason why I ask is that the verb 'fill' is normally used with 'with', but I think this sentence needs 'by' I am not sure
  • filled up filled out filled in gt; database check form
    Definitely not filled up I'm not sure what a database check form is exactly, but whatever it is I would be inclined to say filled-out But actually I far prefer "completed" in written English: Please find attached the completed database check form
  • Fill in the table OR Fill the table? | WordReference Forums
    Hello, I gave an exercise to my students, but I have a question about the way I should formulate the instruction Do you "fill" a table, or "fill it in"? Do you make a difference in English? Thank you!
  • be filled with be full of - WordReference Forums
    The room is filled with laughter << filled, participle adjective - a form of the verb (to fill) The room has been filled with laughter << filled, participle, part of the passive present perfect verb form It seems to me that as I go down these three forms the sense of there being an agent, a cause, increases I suppose a fourth sentence


















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