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terminology - Term for the second letter in Sx, Dx, Rx? - English . . . It seems plausible that the medical convention of using 'x' as the second letter of an abbreviation (in, for example, Dx (diagnosis), Sx (symptom or surgery), Fx (family), Hx (history), and Tx (transplant or treatment)) comes from copying the convention of using Rx as an abbreviation of prescription
Would have had to have been vs would have had to be for past event . . . Both would have had to have been and would have had to be are pointlessly complex for most contexts Just would have to have been (with the first have pronounced haff) is all you need And even that's only if you need Past Tense - if not, it would hafta be like this
history - English Language Usage Stack Exchange This question is related, but is not a duplicate, of Why do some words have quot;X quot; as a substitute? I have noticed that a few nouns can be significantly abbreviated with an "x" at the end
phrases - English Language Usage Stack Exchange I'm confused whether I should use quot;didn't quot; or quot;don't quot; in the following sentence: Makki and Mattsun didn't have time to execute their plan, for two not-so-soon-expected guests are
Distinguishing f–t–θ in th-fronting and th-stopping dialects In standard English, the digraph th is a dental fricative [θ, ð] Several dialects feature th -fronting, where th becomes a labiodental fricative [f, v]; others feature th -stopping, where th becomes a dental stop [t̪, d̪] For example, three sounds like free with th -fronting, tree with th -stopping How well can English speakers distinguish word pairs in these dialects? Specifically: Can
fill a prescription - what does it really mean? Hopefully this simplifies it for you, but the Pharmacist is the one who fills your prescription It might help you to think about a Pharmacist filling a bottle with pills A doctor "writes" a prescription Often a doctor writes a prescription on a piece of paper However, it can also be written electronically, or faxed A pharmacist "fills" a prescription Your prescription bottle will