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英文字典中文字典相关资料:


  • How is wl- pronounced? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    The pronunciation of wl and wr is so ingrained that Minkova need not cover how they would be pronounced in Old English; meanwhile, she carefully documents how the sounds would have changed into Middle English
  • Have a look vs. Take a look - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    What is the difference between Have a look and Take a look (meaning connotations)? For example: Have a look at the question Take a look at the question For some reason I only found first versio
  • grammar - If you were to . . . or If you . . . or If you will . . .
    The first form "If you were to go home, you would feel better " should be grammatically correct, but it sounds rather strange to me The second form "If you went home, you would feel better " is grammatically absolutely correct and also expresses the right thing It is a so-called Conditional Clause of Type II which means that the event in question (i e you go home) is improbable but still
  • I have a question for you Vs I have a question to you
    When properly quoted for Google search, the numbers are: "I have a question for you" 28M results, "I have a question to you" 3M results If usage on the net is a guide, the former over the latter 10:1
  • Can you say in there? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Short answer Yes, you can Modern grammars such as the Oxford Modern English Grammar show there to be a preposition, not an adverb The preposition in cannot take adverbs or adverb phrases as Complements It can take other preposition phrases as Complements For this reason there is no problem using the word there after the preposition in When we use there with a stative verb, it has a
  • supposed to or suppose to? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Supposed to is a very common phrase, as in: you're not supposed to come here It means "you should not come here", "you are not meant to come here" Using *suppose to in this sentence would be considered wrong by most educated speakers The cause of this common omission of the d is probably that d t sounds the same as t, so that there is no difference in pronunciation between supposed to and
  • differences - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    What is the difference between increase, growth, go up and rise? And what is the difference between decline, fall, go down and drop? I really don't know which is the best to describe parts of a gra
  • Is it correct to use me too and I too?
    When I write, I would not use any of these “ [pronoun] too,” and I would write Juan gives a present to Ana, and so do I Juan gives a present to Ana, and so does he When speaking informally, I may say Juan gives a present to Ana, and me too but this is ambiguous because “me too” can mean both “I give a present to Ana, too” and “Juan gives a present to me, too ” I would never
  • pronunciation - Silent w in words starting with wr- - English . . .
    Not My Field, so subject to correction: In Old English the “voiced labiovelar approximant” w was in fact pronounced in the initial clusters wr and wl Lass, Cambridge History of the English Language describes the loss of this pronunciation in the context of “Onset-cluster reduction” (III, page 122): Witch which, not knot, Nash gnash, rite write are homophones in most varieties of
  • Queueing or Queuing - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Which spelling is better, queueing or queuing? Both words seem to mean the same, but there are two different spellings My context is: Queueing Latency versus Queuing Latency If both spelling





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