| bio | website | None |
|---|---|---|
| location | Karnataka | |
| age | 24 | |
| visits | member for | 1 year, 6 months |
| seen | May 16 at 6:30 | |
| stats | profile views | 218 |
Windows Phone App developer, with some experience in asp.net development. Love listening to music and learning new languages (communication with people not to be confused with the programming languages).
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Nov 18 |
awarded | Yearling |
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Aug 31 |
comment |
“He is better than _____.” (1) I (2) I am? But somehow we use "Me" in such sentence that saying "I" doesn't sound right.. May be I am wrong!! |
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Aug 31 |
answered | “He is better than _____.” (1) I (2) I am? |
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Mar 11 |
answered | What do you call the base amount for a loan, investment etc? |
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Mar 7 |
answered | What is the correct way of saying: press a button multiple times, but don't hold it down for too long? |
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Mar 6 |
answered | let you know a couple of facts OR bring couple of facts to your notice |
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Feb 24 |
answered | Can I say 'co-student'? |
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Feb 20 |
answered | Reported speech question |
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Feb 20 |
comment |
Should you use past tense for a fact that still remains in force? @Pitarou i understand :) you need not give a justification. I edited it mainly because, i had missed out the word "Universal" in my answer. And i also realized that the question is not regarding "Universal facts" but just "facts" . |
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Feb 20 |
revised |
Should you use past tense for a fact that still remains in force? deleted 61 characters in body |
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Feb 20 |
answered | Should you use past tense for a fact that still remains in force? |
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Feb 20 |
revised |
Should you use past tense for a fact that still remains in force? edited the question |
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Feb 20 |
suggested | suggested edit on Should you use past tense for a fact that still remains in force? |
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Feb 9 |
comment |
Probably excessive commas - a part of sentence looks like a list of items Rewrite your sentence i would say :) |
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Feb 9 |
comment |
What do you call someone who has extensive knowledge but won't share it? I would call him/her mean !!! |
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Feb 9 |
comment |
Probably excessive commas - a part of sentence looks like a list of items If you omit commas in such sentences wouldn't it lose the meaning that you are willing to convey to the reader. That is the whole purpose of using a comma.Isn't it? |
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Feb 9 |
comment |
Interrogative form of a sentence You cannot form such a interrogative sentence. That is a very tricky question and i don't think there exists a word in English vocabulary which would convey this meaning. Try using the word "Rank" though it doesn't serve the whole purpose but that is the nearest i could think of. |
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Jan 23 |
comment |
What does “whip-snap” mean? Harsh as in the dialogues are intense or rude. |
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Jan 23 |
comment |
What does “whip-snap” mean? I think it means "harsh". Just a guess by looking at the sentence. |
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Jan 23 |
revised |
Is “Honouree” correct in British English? added 2 characters in body |