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prepositions - What is the difference between information on about . . . information of a sensitive nature This does not mean information about "sensitive nature", but describes the information as sensitive (so it might need to be kept private) Similarly: information of this kind is considered sensitive This means the type of information we are talking about (such as medical records) is sensitive
What are the differences between check it and check it out? You'll need to complete a few actions and gain 15 reputation points before being able to upvote Upvoting indicates when questions and answers are useful What's reputation and how do I get it? Instead, you can save this post to reference later
Provide information on, of or about something? Normally you'd say "important information" or "urgent information", but the of form is a well-accepted formal phrasing You might try to use it to indicate owner of the information, but that's really awkward "The disk contains information of Sony on their newest mp3 player" - but I don't think you'd ever encounter it in real life
politeness - Please Find Attached or Please Find Enclosed in a . . . Please find attached "Monthly status report" PDF for your reference would be appropriate; you cannot enclose anything in an email because they don't have envelopes However (in my opinion) a more formal phrasing would be something like Please find the pdf "Monthly status report" attached for your reference or, shortly put Please find the file attached for your reference if it is clear what
What is an entry in a dictionary? - English Language Learners Stack . . . An "entry" in a dictionary is a headword (the word that gets looked up), plus its definition and any ancillary information that pertains to that word, such as an etymology, any usage notes, example sentences, pronunciation guides, inflected forms of the word and any illustrations It is everything that is presented as belonging to that headword
past tense - I didnt (go or went) to party? - English Language . . . I didn't go to (the) party I didn't went to (the) party After the auxiliary verb DO the main verb must be in the plain form This is the form you see in the dictionary It does not have any tense It is not past or present: *He doesn't goes to the gym (ungrammatical - main verb in present tense) *He didn't saw the film (ungrammatical - main verb in past tense) He doesn't go to the gym