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- time - Difference between per month and monthly - English Language . . .
I've referred Is there any difference between “monthly average” and “average per month”? But I want more clearer answer most difference of it Per Month - I've to pay $100 per month as wages
- meaning - Biweekly, bimonthly, biannual, and bicentennial: dual . . .
What do lengths of time with the "bi" prefix mean"? I have understood bicentennial as once every two hundred years, but biannual as meaning twice a year Do biweekly and bimonthly mean twice a week
- single word requests - Annual is to yearly as _____ is to monthly . . .
A more formal word for yearly would be annual I pay my school loans annually I pay my rent check monthly or _____ What is the equivalent of “annual” for “monthly quot;?
- time - Whats the Best English word for 6 months in this group: daily . . .
While one question could be about what does bi- stand for, my question is what better one word is there for 6 months like daily, weekly, monthly, quarterly My guess it there might be one that I don't know of
- word for six-month period. . . . . not as an adjective or as an associated . . .
A semester seems the word you are looking for Merriam-Webster: a period of six months The academic use is, as mentioned, probably more prevalent though (half an academic year) Economically, we often use quarters, making a six month period simply two quarters: How did the company do in the last two quarters of last year? Merriam-Webster again: 4 : the fourth part of a measure of time: as a
- Is there any difference between monthly average and average per . . .
I have trouble understanding if I should use "monthly average" or "average per month" when asking someone to calculate monthly average of a variable, e g heating expenses Is there any difference,
- grammaticality - Monthly and annual as descriptors - English . . .
No, monthly is used correctly in the first case You are comparing apples to oranges here (or adjectives to adverbs) Per The American Heritage Dictionary, 4th edition, annual is defined as: adj 1 Recurring, done, or pefomed every year; yearly: an annual medical examination So annual is an adjective describing an interval
- word choice - What differences are there between annually, yearly . . .
Either annually or yearly can and frequently does replace ‘every year’ as none of the phrases is limited by the number of occurrences, except to the extent that what happens twice a year is strictly biannual, not twice annually There is no difference at all among ‘annually’, ‘yearly’ or 'every year' and Longmans and Oxford Online don’t think there is All their examples are
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