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- apostrophe - Individuals or individuals - English Language Usage . . .
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?
- Experienced vs. seasoned - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
Are these two words interchangeable? According to the Oxford dictionary, experienced means having knowledge or skill in a particular job or activity, while seasoned having a lot of experience in a
- Why do police use the word individual instead of person?
Individual, the specific word that the question was about, does not seem particularly vague, complex, or confusing, nor does it necessitate the use of long sentences
- What do you call an individual who tolerates criticism?
Is there an English word to refer to someone who tolerates (or welcomes, accepts) criticism given about them? Is there an adjective to use for such a person?
- from the level of individual vs. on the level of individual
Seems to me that "{from at} the level of the individual constituents" implies a single level for all, but that "{from at} the levels of the individual constituents" would be problematic because it implies many different levels
- 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'
- grammar - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
What's the grammatical class of quot;we quot; when referring to a group in its entirety versus when referring to each individual member of the group For example, if I said to my girlfriend: We w
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