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  • Facade vs. façade - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    I know that both facade and façade are valid in British English Is that also true for American English? Or should facade be used when writing something for American customers? This is something t
  • Is it suitable to use etc. in an academic paper?
    etc is not informal In fact it is better than its expansion, which sounds rather awkward It is perfectly ok to use etc in an academic paper Just note, however, that both of them are very sparingly and carefully used in serious writing Try to list fully or describe the list instead
  • articles - Analysis of. . . or An analysis of. . . - how should I start . . .
    I'm writing an academic essay and I'm wondering whether I should start like "An analysis of sorting algorithms" or "Analysis of sorting algorithms", the question is about the article "an" versus no
  • When do you leave a space in a paragraph and when do you not?
    @Magpie This is a bit complicated, but yes, it is either-or However, as our French friend mentioned, when you use a blank line to separate sections, or at the top of a chapter, you do not use the indented form, since there already is a sufficient separator The problem with what you usually see on the net is that people who are used to Microsoft systems, and not big on typesetting, use
  • What is the origin of the idiom all the rage?
    There are various expressions in English and other languages that use all, for example all right, or all dressed up and ready to go, however all the is not that common The use of rage is even stra
  • What does at scale mean? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Whats does the expression at scale mean? Does it mean "on a larger scale" or does it mean "at a level appropriate to the what's available"? I came up with these two definitions by looking the
  • the USA vs. the US - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Here is an interesting discussion of US versus U S versus USA versus U S A from Wikipedia: Manual of Style: In American and Canadian English, U S (with periods) is the dominant abbreviation for United States US (without periods) is more common in most other national forms of English Some major American guides to style, such as The Chicago Manual of Style (16th ed ), now deprecate U S and
  • More professional way of saying Correcting a Mistake
    I need to rewrite "correct a mistake" into something more professional I can think of "amending a mistake" or rectifying it, but none seems to sound well (I want to put emphasis on a word that's
  • grammaticality - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    As a non-native English speaker I have never been quite sure how to use the words quot;exist quot; and quot;exists quot; For example is the usage of the said words grammatically correct in the
  • grammaticality - Failed to do vs failed doing - English Language . . .
    Collins says If you fail to do something that you were trying to do, you are unable to do it or do not succeed in doing it The Workers' Party failed to win a single governorship And Gymglish explains: Note the most common constructions of the verb "to fail": "to fail + object (I failed my math test)"; "to fail + to + infinitive verb (He failed to warn me about the hurricane)"; ' to fail + in





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