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OnScreen查看 OnScreen 在百度字典中的解释百度英翻中〔查看〕
OnScreen查看 OnScreen 在Google字典中的解释Google英翻中〔查看〕
OnScreen查看 OnScreen 在Yahoo字典中的解释Yahoo英翻中〔查看〕





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  • What is the difference between on-screen, on screen and on the . . .
    Number 2 and 3 are both correct for what I think you are trying to say Number 2 and 3 both mean "The screen is displaying CNN news", interchangeably Number 1 is improper, as "on the screen" is used to say "Oh look, there's a hair on the screen I am going to wipe it off"
  • On-screen usage as an adverb and or prepositional phrase
    In the Cambridge Dictionary, it means: On-screen: adjective, adverb [ not gradable ] US on the screen of a television or computer: I easily adjusted the colors by using the on-screen menu As it means literally on the screen of a computer, would the sentence be correct if it was rewritten like this: I easily adjusted the colors by using the menu on-screen ? Does in its original version act as
  • What does the phrase pinging around mean here?
    This is opposed to a player indirectly acting on the game world by choosing relevant menu options from an onscreen user interface, or controlling a player character; these are far more common modes of interaction, perhaps more reliable than "pinging" points on a smartphone touch display during a fast-paced action game, even if less intuitive
  • Word usage of type in - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    If this is for a PC application, you should not use type at all because you don't really know what input device the user will use to enter the characters - it could be a physical keyboard, onscreen keyboard, or even voice control Use the verb enter
  • 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
  • You are vs. youre — what is the difference between them?
    If there is a difference (outside of the most formal usage), it is that you are (and other forms that don't use contractions) are more emphatic and separable You are going to be doing it makes a slightly different point from You are going to be doing it
  • What does “up through” mean? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    I'm a newbie in English While I was reading a book, I found that phrase in "(something) will be the topic of the following chapters up through Chapter 3 ", but I don't understand what it means
  • Snow or the snow? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    Should I use the definite article in front of the word snow here? I remember snow in late October many years ago Is this sentence grammatically correct?
  • articles - Are the feelings always a noun? - English Language Learners . . .
    Are feelings always a noun? For example, "headache" or "nausea" Why I am asking this question is because I always have a problem with countable and uncountable nouns First job is identify the nou
  • punctuation - Comma in sentences with since - English Language . . .
    The word "since" is a conjunction introducing a coordinating clause in the structures presented by the OP; " since + subject + verb " forms a subordinating clause According to grammar, when a subordinating clause with "since" comes before a main clause, you put a comma after the subordinating clause So the first structure i e "since + noun + verb, noun + verb" is correct, whereas the other





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