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- Which preposition should I use: from, out of or out from?
0 Which of the following is the best choice if I want to say that we must facilitate information flow within the company at the same time as we must not let parties outside the company get hold of any information? We need to facilitate information flow within – but not from – the company
- How to say on page x and the following pages?
Not “page 42 and the following” The adjective following calls for a noun It looks like you're using “the following” to mean “what follows the current point in the text” or “something that follows” or “the next few lines” “Page 42 and the following pages” sounds correct This could be shortened to “page 42 and following pages” (since you aren't specifying the
- I learned that. . . . Vs. I came to know that Vs. I found out that
Having that makes it about some particular pieces of information In this case, came to know is a superset of learned, because both are completed processes of acquiring knowledge, and learning is about retaining specific facts Because of this, I can't think of any cases where one works and the other doesn't if you include that
- prepositions - research into vs research on - English Language . . .
“Research into” suggests you’re researching information that is already out there—reading published studies, watching news reports, combing through websites, etc
- prepositions - give input on VS. give input into - English Language . . .
"Give input into" and "give input on" have different meanings To give input into something is to provide information or resources I would give input to a computer program, or perhaps give input to a machine To give input on something is to offer suggestions or opinions about the topic
- Whats the difference between revise, amend and modify
When you revise, amend and modify something, your intention is all to improve them so does it mean I can use them interchangeably?
- Difference between is added and was added
Add some more content to your question This'll make it further clear and understandable Which context you are talking about? The verbs 'is' and 'was' act differently!
- Information or Informations? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
I thought information is singular and plural But now I'm not sure which version is right: The dialogue shows two important informations OR The dialogue shows two important information Which
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