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grammar - Which one is correct, in or at? - English Language . . . 2 He is at the museum (in Covent Garden) In case of work Normally, we use work + in conjunction with your department, faculty, section, or field of expertise ex I work in the accounting department at my company Similarly in OP's case, we can say : I fixed a computer in the accounting department at ABC company
prepositions - work for work in work at - English Language . . . So: I work for an accounting company I work at a famous legal firm I work in the accounting department at Samsung I work in the cafeteria I work in London I work for Samsung in London (Also, note that it's an accounting corporation, not a accounting corporation ) I work at Samsung This is correct It would also be correct to say I work
Which words could be used in accounting or bookkeeping email addresses . . . 0 I need to select all the accounting or bookkeeping email addresses out of a big list According to the task, the ones that contain the words "sales" or "production" are not accounting I filtered all that look like [email protected], and the ones that contain the word "account" But there should be more
Accounting Terminology - English Language Learners Stack Exchange I would like to know how to say something related to accounting in English I have to show the totals of a current account in the following way: Totals: Below all, show the total Credit, Debit and
I major in accounts vs. My major is accounts An issue with both of your sentences is that the field is accounting (or accountancy), not accounts You might say "I work in accounts," meaning you work in a company department responsible for book-keeping, where "accounts" refers to the accounts department and not accountancy I major in accounting
idioms - In charge of vs Responsible for - English Language . . . The use of "in charge of": Philip’s in charge of our marketing department (the department is under his control) All in all, the second meaning of "responsible for" is more about a particular area of responsibility ( the minister responsible for the environment (not in charge of the environment) While "in charge of" is about supervision
Hello, This is vs My Name is or I am in self introduction I am from India and not a native English speaker I do often hear people introducing themselves like "Hello everyone; This is James" Is it an acceptable form in native English? Usually, I know t