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coordinate vs cumulative adjectives | WordReference Forums According to the above explanation, which I found on one of the forum threads about coordinate and cumulative adjectives, two or more adjectives of the same kind should be separated by commas (coordinate adjectives), while those of different kinds be simply grouped together without commas (cumulative adjectives)
Cumulative vs continuous - WordReference Forums Would my understanding of these two sentences be correct? (a) I have been studying English for 3 hours (These three hours must be continuous, without "substantive" break ) (b) I have studied English for 3 hours (These three hours may be the total and can be either cumulative or continuous
Cum Totals [=cumulative US school transcripts] Hello, I have a question probably for those of you familiar with the American university system I have in front of me a diploma with an official academic transcript, in which the courses taken and grades earned are listed and I wonder what Cum Totals stand for Under the list of courses there
As of today or To date - WordReference Forums As of today, my savings account has $57,642 00 in it I would use "to date" to describe the cumulative effect of an ongoing process: To date, our charity has distributed 27,000 meals to the hungry The main difference is that "to date" strongly suggests that whatever you are counting, or doing, or have, will change in some way in the near future
Menzione alla carriera (voto laurea) | WordReference Forums Ciao a tutti! Ho cercato post precedenti sull'argomento, ma non si è arrivati a una conclusione in nessun caso Devo tradurre un voto di laurea: 110 e lode con menzione alla carriera Se ho capito bene, 110 cum laude è il "semplice" 110 e lode, ma la menzione? Come indicarla?
Adjective order: does the age come after the shape When I add the "small", then I'm uncomfortable with cumulative adjectives whichever way round I put them A small old round table A small round old table I'm happier with A small, round, old table or A small, old, round table Two words of caution: (1) no description of adjective order is set in concrete; such descriptions describe tendencies
police is are does do [singular vs plural] | WordReference Forums "Police" is a collective noun that can be either singular or plural, depending on the context If you say "the police do" you refer to the individual police officers, while "the police does" refers to the whole force as a unit In this particular context, the writer probably refers to the police as an entity getting involved in politics rather than the individual members