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  • Wight and Wiht is white? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Wight is pronounced "white" Wight can be found as "wiht" I have heard people pronounce this as "wit" Is this mispronounced or for example dutch white = WIT?
  • Are w o, w , b c common abbreviations in the US?
    I remember when staying a few months in the US years ago that I saw some people using the abbreviations below However, I can't exactly remember in which contexts I encountered them, (whether I saw
  • Proceed to doing something or Proceed to do something
    That is an interesting question, and I think the answer is that it depends In the example you provided, I think both phrases could be considered correct, though I would definitely prefer the second one, because it reads much more logically to me 'Now proceed to write on the paper' sounds like a command being given to someone in the present, telling them to begin the process of writing on the
  • What is the proper name for a circle with a line through it?
    The general prohibition sign (official name, according to ISO 7010), also known as a no symbol, no sign, circle-backslash symbol, nay, interdictory circle or universal no, is a red circle with a red diagonal line through it (running from top left to bottom right), completely enclosing a pictogram to indicate something is not permitted The symbol is sometimes black instead of red when color is
  • Enamored of with by - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Looking at Google Ngrams, British English seems to use nearly exclusively "enamoured of", while American English uses both "enamored of" and "enamored with" "Enamo (u)red by" is quite rare on both sides of the pond I would probably say "enamored of" when talking about a person, an animal, or an abstract idea, and "enamored with" when talking about a tangible object I can't tell whether this
  • Is it slough or slew? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Which is the proper word to use to indicate a large amount of something - "slough" or "slew"? Eg: StackExchange now has a slough of potential new sites in Area51 English stackexchange com has a
  • word choice - In the hope of vs. with the hope of - English . . .
    Both are grammatical There seems to be little difference in meaning, but a detailed corpus search might show that they were used in different contexts What corpus evidence does show is that in the hope is more popular than with the hope It occurs nearly four times as much in the Corpus of Contemporary American English, and nearly eighteen times as much in the British National Corpus
  • What is the origin of shorthand for with - gt; w ?
    CyberDefinitions gives a plausible explanation: Although its origin is contested, w has been used at least since the rise of the fast-food industry in the 1950s As a form of shorthand to save time when writing down food orders, waiters replaced the words "with" and "without" with the abbreviations w and w o Since that time, the use of w as an abbreviation of "with" has become much more
  • Which is correct: with regards to, in regards with, regarding?
    I have been using the following phrases but I am still not confident that they are grammatically correct and sound right: quot;in regards with something quot; quot;with regards to something quot;
  • Capitalization of for latin phrase in title case (in vitro, in vivo . . .
    I would like to use the following phrase as a title that needs to be in "title case" I'm wondering what the procedure is for capitalizing Latin phrases Media for in vitro tissue production Var





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