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preferred, prefered. . . - WordReference Forums Preferred and preferring are correct because the second syllable is stressed there Same for conferred, transferred, referred, deferred, inferred But: differed or tutored (stress on the first syllable)
referred to in - WordReference Forums How about Americans and Australians? Are they also natives No doubt that Americans are also creating their own style of English language in one way or another Aren't they? So, my opinion is that no matter whether native or not, when communicating each other, simple, clarity should be preferred Otherwise, the communication may be nothing Am
is more preferred correct? - WordReference Forums Context and the actual sentence make a difference In your sentence, "more preferred" is unnecessary and even wrong, but as I said, it could work in other sentences "More preferred" suggests that out of multiple preferred things, there's a stronger preference for one
northwest or North-West - WordReference Forums Question- Preferred location: in the _____ Question is 'northwest' The formation of this word I found in Cambridge Dictionary was ' northwest', while what the transcript of IELTS has given is 'north-west', but the only given answer for the blank is ' North-West' and what I filled in is 'northwest' Why is it a capital N and W and with a dash?
What is the proper abbreviation for not applicable? I've seen n a, N A, NA, etc According to the Wikipedia article entitled "Manual of Style (abbreviations)", N A is the only one that is proper; however, according to the Wikipedia article entitled "n a" ("Not applicable" redirects to "n a"), all of the other forms are also acceptable
Prepared by in a report | WordReference Forums In our company there were templates, preferred required formats, lines for signature from author(s), rounds of review, eventual approvers etc So the verbs needed depend totally on exactly what happened from start to finish and what procedures are used required
Id prefer to stay . . . Id prefer staying . . . - WordReference Forums Hi, I understand that the verb prefer can have either a to-infinitive or a gerund as its object, but this is not necessarily the case with would prefer I would need your help with the following two sentences a) I'd prefer to stay at home tonight rather than go to the cinema b) I'd prefer
a. m. or am - punctuating time | WordReference Forums The 14th Ed , 14 30, says the CMS preferred style is small caps with periods while British practice is lowercase with periods However, they go on to say that small caps without periods is an acceptable alternative, and, if your system does not have small caps, full caps is acceptable
first name, given name, family name and surname - WordReference Forums Hola, tengo un pequeño problema Exactamente ¿qué es cada cosa? Por ejemplo, George W Bush, George es el first name, Bush es el surname, y ¿W? Lo digo porque tengo que mandar un envío con Western Union y hay dos campos a rellenar: First name y last name Como ejemplo George W Bush, ¿dónde
distractible vs distractable - WordReference Forums Using those guidelines, it seems that distractible is the preferred choice - but distractable, though uncommon, is permissible (not permissable ;-) ) So the short, direct answer to the original question I believe is "yes, they're both the same, with distractable being an uncommon variant" < Edited to write out abbreviation in full Cagey