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- word usage - Difference between fulfill and fill - English Language . . .
What is the difference between fulfill and fill? In the following example, do they have the same meaning? I'll fill the form tomorrow I'll fulfill the form tomorrow
- Is it possible to use the verb fill with the word shortage?
“The aid is intended to fill the food shortage in the area” But your example sentence is very strange, and not because of the choice of verb In “We can X each other’s shortages”, I can’t think of any verb that would make the sentence make sense without having to think up highly specific contexts
- sentence meaning - Fill the form UP or Fill the form IN - English . . .
In school, for exams we FILL UP forms But I have seen people saying "FILL IN the form " Fill the form in OR fill the form up, which is correct Please explain
- difference - Well vs Well up | Fill vs Fill up - English Language . . .
Fill X up when X is something that contains liquid often has the literal meaning and not the phrasal meaning My eyes filled up with tears This means the eyes (capable of containing some quantity of tears) are now full of tears (and presumably dripping down the face) This meaning of fill up can be interchanged with well up, even though they don't mean the same thing
- To fill the pot to its top, would be properly describe what I mean to . . .
There was a series of commercials for the "Brim" coffee brand with the tagline "Fill it to the rim with Brim!" They used the word "rim" because the coffee was already called "Brim", but it always seemed a little unnatural (to me) because "to the brim" is what I would normally say
- Is fill something in into something grammatically correct?
Unlike with "fill," "pour" only works one way: [x] The bottles are poured with wine [ ] Wine is poured into the bottles "Pour" is used for things that can flow; wine is a liquid and can flow, and grains of sand, in the aggregate, can also exhibit fluid-like properties (it is perfectly fine to "pour sand into a pail")
- Cover Fill In - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
I have a question about the difference between the verb "cover" and phrase "fill in" in couple of work-related contexts The common feature of the two contexts is a store with two employees, John
- Fill me vs fill me up. - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
When to use the former and the later? Example sentence: The brunch didn't fill me (up)
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