copy and paste this google map to your website or blog!
Press copy button and paste into your blog or website.
(Please switch to 'HTML' mode when posting into your blog. Examples: WordPress Example, Blogger Example)
verbs - What is the meaning of is of? - English Language Learners . . . According to the Oxford Dictionary, the phrase is of means Possess intrinsically; give rise to Bulk and usefulness are characteristics of something: it possesses those characteristic intrinsically, so you should say It is of no great bulk It is of no use whatsoever Similarly, something may give rise to interest, so you might say It is of no interest to me
Which preposition should I use when saying Idea of or Idea on Which preposition should I use when asking someone about their idea on of something in a formal manner? Saying "idea on" sounds too informal, but "idea of" doesn't sound correct For example, whic
Whats the difference between something and some thing? It has to be something she would like Another possibility is that the writer uses separate words to emphasize the "thing" part (in contrast to some one) To quote Jim Carrey quoting Shatner from an old "Twilight Zone": There's someone on the wing! Some thing! Still, it is rare and the example you quote is more likely a typo than intentional
Work off vs. work off of - English Language Learners Stack Exchange To work off of [some thing] means: to use that thing as a basis to do something else Here is a list of sentences from Ludwig guru As Kate Bunting says, one can use "work from", too: to work from a template or work off of a template or to work off a template [declarative only]