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  • What is the difference between an Emir and a Sultan?
    What is the difference between an Emir and a Sultan? Are they both Sheik? For instance, OALD defines: Emir: the title given to some Muslim rulers Emirate: an area of land that is ruled over
  • grammar - Do I Capitalize someones role? - English Language Usage . . .
    Some titles serve as names, and therefore have initial capitals, though they also serve as descriptions: the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Emir of Kuwait, the Shah of Iran
  • capitalization - When referring to the British Empire, should the e . . .
    Whether to capitalise capitalize the name of an empire is a matter of style British publications are inconsistent (or uneasy) about capitalising The (UK) Guardian (centre-left) style guide gives 'British empire' as the expected style, whereas the Daily Telegraph (centre-right) guide has no mention of the term, but has plenty of articles with "British Empire" in them The (American) Chicago
  • Which word can represent X and O in Tic Tac Toe
    In tic tac toe game, there are X and O's in boxes How can i refer these O and X's? Maybe figure or value of box?
  • About the meaning of the phrase At one end of the continuum
    The (mostly theoretical) Turing machine could represent one end of such a continuum, with it being a simple computational device that can read, write, or move a pointer forward At its core, the Turing machine is so basic (and its notion of computing so loose) that it can encompass many types of today's programs
  • About the structure of There are is - English Language Usage . . .
    Hello Emir, welcome to Stack Exchange! You can find your answer in any good quality English dictionary Questions asked here on Stack Exchange are expected have basic research done on them and to describe what research has already been done Please try Merriam-Webster or Oxford dictionary and then see if you'd like to rephrase your question (since the dictionaries clearly list this context
  • terminology - What are pronunciation options for letter E in the word . . .
    The FACE vowel ( e or ej or ɛj ), but this is almost always only in borrowed words like emir and éclair In general, but probably not so often in enum, how any vowel comes out also greatly depends on the stress and the emphasis placed on the word, because emphatic forms can take on lengthening properties never otherwise heard in normal
  • syntactic analysis - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    @vectory No, nice to see (you) is not a constituent, and nice is not an object; that is completely wrong In the underlying structure, to see you is the subject and nice is the predicative complement In purely grammatical terms, in this more common version the subject is it, yes, but the PC is still nice; to see you is the extrapositioned subject My comment above should perhaps have made it




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