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- pervading pervasive - WordReference Forums
In fact, "pervading" is the verb and "pervasive" is the adjective Here are some examples: The idea of an influence pervading the universe is not of itself new The spirit pervading the ranks of farmers is rapidly changing There was a pervading sense of happiness Police corruption is a pervasive issue that touches all communities
- pervasive vs. evasive - WordReference Forums
Pervasive is related to the verb "pervade": to spread through or throughout, esp subtly or gradually; permeate Evasive is related to the verb "evade": to get away from or avoid (imprisonment, captors, etc); escape (Definitions from the Word Reference dictionary at the top of the page )
- pervasive pattern of disregard | WordReference Forums
In simple terms, if something is said to be pervasive, it means it is very widespread and can be found in almost any part of the country, society, etc Distrust of British politicians is pervasive in England That does not mean that everyone distrusts all politicians, or that all politicians are distrusted
- C. E. O. s or CEOs or CEOs - WordReference Forums
Digital business isn’t a department; it should be a pervasive approach for the whole organization Getting there is challenging CEOs report that training and culture change programs are the keys to progress Additionally, executive team data literacy strongly correlates to digital business outcome success
- To level vs. to levy - WordReference Forums
Hello, I know that the verb 'to levy' usually means to impose (e g the government levied new tariffs on alcohol) However, I've heard people use it in contexts where it means 'to aim at' or 'to pin on' Try as I might, I can't seem to find that particular definition of the word in the
- A formal way of saying I couldnt make it to. . . - WordReference Forums
Thank you killer_queen for your reply Actually I thought about using attend, however, it doesn't sound correct to me, especially that I am in a situation in which I am unable to go arrive in a certain CITY due to a storm, for example
- typos Vs. typoes | WordReference Forums
Hello teachers, As you know when a word ends in an ‘o’ and comes after a consonant, we add ‘es’ to make it the plural Like: tomatoes But why the plural form of typo is typos? Why not es?
- uncertainty of uncertainty about | WordReference Forums
Thanks, but I feel that I expressed it ambiguously in my previous post I meant (1) uncertainty = someone's doubts, indecision, lack of self-confidence 2) uncertainty = something that is uncertain
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