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Are w o, w , b c common abbreviations in the US? R C – “remote control” b c – “because” Like most abbreviations, these are less common in formal writing, although some of them (like I O) appear often in technical writing Some are uncommon even in informal writing; I've only seen b c in things like text messages and tweets, for example, and those usually leave out the slash
How to say a lt;b lt;c? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange In the mathematics, a lt; b I think it should be said as "a is less than b" So, does can I say the title ("a lt; b lt; c") as b is larger than a and less than c or is there a better way to say?
Is there a reason behind the ordering of letters in the English . . . BC (the C being pronounced k , not s in Roman times) compares with FG: B is a bilabial plosive, F has at times been pronounced as bilabial approximant, meaning it has at least sometimes been pronounced by simply blowing through slightly parted lips
A, B, C, or etc. vs. A, B, or C, etc. vs. A, B, C, etc. Normal usage is "A, B, C, etc " (this is the norm, a list of things that is long and generally well known), "A or B, C or D, etc " (where each letter represents some kind of distinct and clear categorical choice that will be obvious to the reader and essentially impossible to confuse -- this is probably very rare, though)
terminology - Why use BCE CE instead of BC AD? - English Language . . . Wikipedia, Anno Domini article: For example, Cunningham and Starr (1998) write that "B C E C E …do not presuppose faith in Christ and hence are more appropriate for interfaith dialog than the conventional B C A D " If there is a standardization or shift occurring, it's likely toward BCE CE, at least in the United States
What is the correct usage of A is to B as C is to D? The construction A is to B as C is to D is very specific (A relates to B in the same way that C relates to D), and probably shouldn't be linked to simpler forms
meaning - Why are there two tos in from . . . to . . . to . . . This isn't what the OP's case means, even figuratively The OP's case doesn't unpack to "from A to B, then from B to C, then from C to D", which is an alternate example of "my flight goes from New York to Atlanta to San Jose" In this case, it's "the airline flies everywhere, from New York to Paris to Timbuktu"
Punctuation in a sentence from A or B to C and even D Is there a need for punctuation in the following sentence: "Response time has reduced from weeks or days to hours and even minutes in some cases " More generally, how should one use punctuation in a