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- Computers: what is the difference between load and loading?
The noun version of loading can be the abstract as commented above, but because it tends to refer to a process rather than an event, it is also natural and common to use it in referring to things that take some time "Document loading" implies it is(was will be) ongoing
- idioms - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
What is the meaning of quot;to coin a phrase quot;? I saw the meaning in some dictionaries and their examples, but yet I have trouble with it! Cambridge: something you say before using an expression
- Are you working today or Do you work today?
"Are you working today?" is a specific question about this day - not this day of the week, but this exact day For example, it might be a Wednesday, and you know the other person normally works Wednesdays, but perhaps you are enquiring if they took a vacation da
- Does English have a third-person imperative?
Now, not everything that is before the verb is a subject English allows "vocative" noun phrases These are not part of the grammar of a clause, but are used to "call" to get people's attention
- A: Has she ever been in a coma? B: Yes, she has, for two years
She’s been in a coma for three years The use of the present perfect followed by a duration of time strongly implies that she is still in a coma
- Is it correct to say I wont be long. Im pretty much finished. ?
The example I won't be long; I'm pretty much finished is completely idiomatic I would quibble with the paraphrase that you describe as a "translation in Persian" (of course you provided it in English), in that I won't be long does not mean quite the same thing as I won't be late
- sentence structure - English Language Learners 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
- What does in the open mean in an enclosed area in which domestic . . .
Google dictionary defines the word quot;run quot; as a noun in one sense as follows: an enclosed area in which domestic animals or birds can run freely in the open The phrasing here is kind of
- meaning in context - Thats the Percodan talking . . . - English . . .
It's more common to hear "the alcohol talking" or other variations It gets used in two ways Somebody else tells a drunk person that they're only doing thinking something because they're drunk
- Which of these is correct, “She doesnt has” or “She doesnt have”? And . . .
She doesn't has a book She doesn't have a book Why is the first sentence wrong? We use 'has' with singular, and 'she' is singular
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英文名字起源
希伯来 希腊 条顿 印度 拉丁 拉丁语 古英语 英格兰 阿拉伯 法国 盖尔 英语 匈牙利 凯尔特 西班牙 居尔特 非洲 美洲土著 挪威 德国 威尔士 斯拉夫民族 古德语 爱尔兰 波斯 古法语 盎格鲁撒克逊 意大利 盖尔语 未知 夏威夷 中古英语 梵语 苏格兰 俄罗斯 土耳其 捷克 希腊;拉丁 斯干那维亚 瑞典 波兰 乌干达 拉丁;条顿 巴斯克语 亚拉姆 亚美尼亚 斯拉夫语 斯堪地纳维亚 越南 荷兰
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