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Should it be concerned person or person concerned? An office colleague wrote the following in an email: Kindly log a ticket for the same and assign it to the concerned team I wrote back the following: I believe it should be "Kindly log a tic
What do you call an individual who tolerates criticism? As there isn't a specific context given, I'm going to suggest a self-explanatory term: criticism-tolerant It is a neologism and not a common word but everyone would understand
What is a word to describe something that belongs exclusively to or is . . . A right or privilege exclusive to a particular individual or class: ‘in some countries, higher education is predominantly the prerogative of the rich’ Per your example the feature film reinforces the deterring notion that personal assistants are the prerogative of high-level executives This can also be intensified by the use of 'sole'
any every - Any individual or any individuals? - English Language . . . When you say any individual you actually don't care about which one of the individuals you refer to But when you say any individuals you it doesn't matter for the speaker how many individuals, but what matters that number of those individuals will be positive
single word requests - Legal name for individual vs. company . . . Saeed, is there a legal requirement for your site to use the right words? If so, you may want to check with a lawyer instead If not, I think "individual" and "organization" covers them; the latter encompasses both for-profit companies and non-profit organizations This is US-speak, at least –
Word for a piece of a whole - English Language Usage Stack Exchange Stack Exchange Network Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q A communities including Stack Overflow, the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers
pronouns - Is it correct to use their when referring to a single . . . Imagine you were learning English as a foreign language; I'm sure you'd be told that (unless there is gender ambiguity) a female individual requires the possessive adjective "her" The only reason I can think of for using 'their' in a case like this would be to tease those who are annoyed by such solecisms
What do you call each individual component of a number: a digit, a . . . If you are talking about the individual "letters", it would have to be a digit, which has the no positional or directional reference Both "n-figure salary" and "places" do not refer to the individual representation of the letter, but are related to the total number of digits