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- word usage - Participants vs Participantses - English Language Usage . . .
Pronouncing participants's is obviously "participantses" However, how to pronounce the abridged and normally written version participants', is subject to differences in preferences
- Whats the difference between attendee and participant?
Conversely, some events maintain a strict distinction between attendee and participants Say for instance, a panel discussion in front of a 1000 college students In such a case, the participants are all the people on stage, and the people watching are attendee
- Synonyms for participant - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
What kind of participant? Participating in conducting the experiment or participating in the experiment itself as a subject?
- grammatical number - participants or the participants - English . . .
In my opinion, it should be "the participants", since the particular participants that researchers recruited do an experiment Why do scientists write "participants" instead of "the participants"?
- Reschedule meeting due to the unavailability of one participant
I'd like to reschedule the meeting due to the unavailability of one of the participants He's an important element for the meeting I am looking for a sample e-mail to inform all participants that the meeting will be postponed by two hours
- What are people in a conversation called in English?
Participants: good Could refer to people participating in something other than a conversation, like "participants in the ball game", but works given proper context
- A word for a group of people in a church - English Language Usage . . .
This reference from the US Conference of Catholic Bishops seems to use ministers as a term that would include ordained celebrants and lay participants assisting in the mass But they're pretty adamant the only celebrants are ordained In a religious gathering, conclave--whatever you want to call it-- where the participants are peers, though, I think you could call everyone celebrants, though
- What is a word or phrase that indicates asking all participants in a . . .
Rejects: I've been using "round-robin", and "round-table", but I suspect both of those are wrong, as round robin in sports generally indicates all permutations of pairs, and round-table is open to a more free-style discussion format where louder and more outspoken participants might dominate
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