- single word requests - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
I want to express in a description of personalized language instruction that some activities are synchronous, i e require a person-to-person meeting in realtime (e g in person, telephone, video-c
- phrase requests - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
0 Try reactive It is used in the area of realtime systems to refer to the need to accept, process, and respond react to many inputs in real time (i e , fast)
- Word for describing how time is counted - English Language Usage . . .
In the computing and control fields, "realtime" has a specific meaning, which has to do with immediacy guarantees
- grammaticality - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
Maybe it sounds better to you because a pleasure to read parallels the structure of a breeze to write, while actually updated in real-time doesn't, so you subconsciously think of it as being separate from the former two It feels a little awkward to me too, but including the are makes the sentence ungrammatical -- unless you move the and too: Live blogs that are a breeze to write and a
- Use of the definite article before a persons name or pronoun
Hey native English speakers, My question is regarding the use of the definite article before a person's name, as in Realtime with the Bill Maher on HBO (youtu be
- What is the correct title for someone who gives podcasts?
To avoid a term suggestive of "iPod", some use the term netcast instead of podcast, such as the TWiT tv podcaster Leo Laporte (though the older term is also used in the broader sense of any internet-delivered realtime media transmission) Although netcaster sounds like someone who works on a fishing trawler
- What does “10-4 - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
because it took a fraction of a second for the early radios to wake-up That still pretty much happens today in realtime voice-detection computer systems, such as Teamspeak and others
- Does mislead imply intent? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
@realtime I suppose so, but it really depends which of the two you'd like answered! So, say for example, if your question is what's in the body, I might title it 'Do the words "I feel misled" imply a feeling of intent, with respect to the speaker's point of view?' But then again, only you know what you mean to ask I hope you're not taking the tongue-in-cheek pun as rude, by the way If so, I
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