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1. Depression was very common among hostel residents and people of no fixed ABODE. A. home B.domicile C.residence D.abode -- ALL of your answers are possible! You'll need to change A, B and C or start again with a different question.
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All of them are correct. Here are some usage notes from the dictionary: Usage Note: The adjective elder is not a synonym for elderly. In comparisons between two persons, elder means "older" but not necessarily "old": My elder
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Liat.
If you insist the sentence is correct, can you please educate me which one of the following definitions meets the grammatical requirement of the sentence in question? For the benefit of a slight doubt, I will invite other's opinions.
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
goodman
161 days ago
American English, Verbs, Idioms, Synonyms, Phrasal Verbs, Sentences, Countries, United States, United Kingdom, Great Britain, American, Languages
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Hi,
Was this sentence written by a British person? I have some doubts, because in my experience the use of the word 'administration' as a synonym for 'government' is a feature of American English.
For that reason. I'd
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I always thought those words could be used synonymously as nouns (when 'usage' doesn't refer to a habit). From Dictionary.reference.com: Usage: The act, manner, or amount of using; use: the usage of a technical term; an instrument
ESL Vocabulary and Idioms
by
abraxas25
170 days ago
Nouns, Synonyms, Usages, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Business, United States, American, References, Career, Languages
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As Prof Dunc has indicated, they aren't all synonyms. Furthermore, I would suggest that antecedent is rarely used to refer to ancestors (it's more often a grammatical term). Precursor, forerunner, predecessor, progenitor usually do not
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Hi,
I have always used "provided " as the correct form. But after researching on line, I believe both are coorect.
Kenneth G. Wilson (1923–). The Columbia Guide to Standard American English. 1993.
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
goodman
202 days ago
American English, Synonyms, Countries, United States, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Speaking, Chat, American, Friendships, Conversational, Languages
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I take "usage" as a particular standard or non-standard way of using something. It's a noun. "Practice" is almost a synonym. Breaking a raw egg into one's beer seems like a strange usage / practice.
We say "the
ESL Vocabulary and Idioms
by
avangi
224 days ago
Nouns, Synonyms, Relationships, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Usages, Friends, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, United States, Languages
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Yank is a generic term that any foreigner could use to describe any American Not here (UK) it isn't. It can only apply to (any) citizen of the USA. Yankee is a specific term, used by Americans in the south-eastern part of the US It's also
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When I first read Catch-22, probably about 40 years ago, I ranked it as one of the best books I'd ever read. The film of the book was also good. (And from me, that's high praise. Usually I hate films based on books I've liked.) About
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