| bio | website | |
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| location | ||
| age | ||
| visits | member for | 8 months |
| seen | Oct 22 '12 at 10:23 | |
| stats | profile views | 11 |
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Oct 15 |
comment |
Preposition choice: impression “of”/“about”/“from” great tip! thank you a lot! |
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Oct 15 |
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Preposition choice: impression “of”/“about”/“from” thank you for your helpful advice! |
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Oct 15 |
asked | Preposition choice: impression “of”/“about”/“from” |
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Sep 28 |
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till vs. until in “from Apr. 21st till/until Apr. 28th” thank you! I will look into these posts |
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Sep 26 |
awarded | Commentator |
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Sep 26 |
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till vs. until in “from Apr. 21st till/until Apr. 28th” Guys, you are all great, thank you for help! |
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Sep 26 |
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till vs. until in “from Apr. 21st till/until Apr. 28th” that is super! thank you! |
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Sep 26 |
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till vs. until in “from Apr. 21st till/until Apr. 28th” Thank you for your answer, it is really of great help |
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Sep 26 |
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till vs. until in “from Apr. 21st till/until Apr. 28th” Oh, really? You mean I can freely write all the following variants? "from April 21 till April 28" or "from April 21 to April 28" or even "from April 21 through April 28"? |
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Sep 26 |
awarded | Editor |
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Sep 26 |
revised |
till vs. until in “from Apr. 21st till/until Apr. 28th” added 44 characters in body |
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Sep 26 |
asked | till vs. until in “from Apr. 21st till/until Apr. 28th” |
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Sep 25 |
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Are there cases when the word “best” as an adjective could be used without “the”? Thank you, guys! Your answers are very helpful. |
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Sep 25 |
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Are there cases when the word “best” as an adjective could be used without “the”? Thank you! That's the way I was thinking, but then started to hesitate. Thank you for the answer |
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Sep 25 |
asked | Are there cases when the word “best” as an adjective could be used without “the”? |
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Sep 7 |
comment |
Employing comparative forms without explicit comparison thank you! then could we say that it will be justified if in marketing literature we will write "3 times less rate" or " 3 times lower rate" or it will be considered like a mistake? |
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Sep 7 |
awarded | Student |
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Sep 6 |
comment |
Employing comparative forms without explicit comparison Thank you very much! Could you kindly give me some examples of instances where such phrase you say can be omitted? |
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Sep 6 |
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Employing comparative forms without explicit comparison And may I clarify. Do you mean I should always add "as" phrase after "half as much"? for example "half as much as a competitor do" |
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Sep 6 |
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Employing comparative forms without explicit comparison Good day, Kris. Thank you for your answer. Could you advice me then how "3 times less rate" or " 3 times lower rate" should be paraphrased if we talk about reduction? |