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- apostrophe - Individuals or individuals - English Language Usage . . .
2 Individuals' if you are referring to patients in general - or you could say an individual's
- single word requests - Legal name for individual vs. company . . .
7 I'm creating an online service and I want both individuals and companies to use it In the registration form, I want to ask the user: Are you an individual or a company? Are these terms correct to refer to individuals (real persons) vs companies and organizations? Are there any better legal substitutions for them?
- Word like culture, but specific to an individual?
An individual's moral standards and expectations are their personal philosophy It's hard to find a dictionary entry defining personal philosophy but it is a well-used phrase for defining the sum of an individual's beliefs (whether they are consciously aware of those beliefs or not)
- tailored to someone needs VS tailor-made - English Language Usage . . .
However the term tailored had been hijacked in certain circumstances, for instance tailored shirt is a term used in the UK for an off-the-peg shirt with sides that aren't straight, but I would still expect a tailored suit to be tailor-made to an individual
- single word requests - Less formal synonym for individual - English . . .
I'm creating a service with two tiers - one for individuals, and one for businesses Advertising material will be split into two sections of information, which will be titled "For individuals", and
- pronouns - Is it correct to use their when referring to a single . . .
Even people who use singular they generally do not extend it to eclipse all singular pronouns like this There was a recent question where someone mentioned their (!) eight-year-old daughter ‘correcting’ his use of she for an unspecified, but female, classmate, claiming it should be they; but that sort of usage remains a marginal exception
- Is there a word to describe an individual who has complete control over . . .
Let's say examples of negative emotions are sadness and despair, and example of positive emotions are happiness and pride So is there a word that describes a person who has total, complete control
- What is a word to describe something that belongs exclusively to or is . . .
A right or privilege exclusive to a particular individual or class: ‘in some countries, higher education is predominantly the prerogative of the rich’ Per your example the feature film reinforces the deterring notion that personal assistants are the prerogative of high-level executives This can also be intensified by the use of 'sole'
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