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- Prerequisite for vs. prerequisite to - English Language Usage . . .
According to Humboldt (Aksan, 1998), language is a prerequisite to the materialization of thought The prerequisites of these procedures are the reader's actual and fictional encyclopedias -- they are individually differentiated
- grammaticality - Pre-requisite vs prerequisite - English Language . . .
In short, prefixes with a hypen, e g "pre-" should be avoided unless it will not be clear to the reader what the word is This is even more the case if there is an existing word so, in your case, "pre-requisite" should not be used Interconnection -- not Inter-connection; Pre-workout -- not Preworkout Prerequisite -- not Pre-requisite Multitask -- not Multi-task Polymath -- not Poly-math
- differences - Precondition vs. prerequisite - English Language . . .
In conclusion, security is the precondition of political freedom and political freedom is the prerequisite for economic freedom Do precondition and prerequisite mean the same in the above? Is ther
- antonyms - Word for opposite of *prerequisite*? Something that is . . .
Prerequisite describes something that must exist before another thing Is there a word that describes an opposite, that is, something that is made possible because of the existence of another thing
- Hyphenation of prerequisite - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
I'm proofreading my thesis, and found that TeX in its infinite wisdom had decided to hyphenate prerequisite as pre-req-ui-site I've replaced it with pre-re-qui-si-te, but I'm a bit unsure what the
- phrase requests - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
@mplungjan I did find that question, but I'm not really looking in a software feature context, so "optional requirements" definitely sounds oxymoronic without being relevant jargon Ditto "out of scopes" Nice-to-have works, but well, it doesn't sound so good, hence I was wondering if there was a better word phrase around
- Can one meet criteria, or satisfy requirements?
I usually see 'satisfy the criteria' and 'meet the requirements', but is it acceptable to use 'meet the criteria', or 'satisfy the requirements'?
- What does something 101 mean? [closed] - English Language Usage . . .
Many times I saw the phrase something 101, such as Microsoft Excel 101 What exactly does it mean?
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