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- spelling - When is the suffix -tor and -ter used? - English Language . . .
There is also a usage trend to use -tor when the intent is to emphasize that the agent is a person, while -ter is used when the agent is not necessarily a person For example, ‘compu tor ’ the original term meaning a person performing computation later becoming ‘compu ter ’ when calculations were performed by either people or machines
- What does ter mean? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
ter summat stronger if yeh've got it is used to show heavy accent or a dialect by writing words as they are pronounced (see Phonemic orthography) Here ter would be the phonemic orthography of to: I wouldn't say no to something stronger if you've got it, mind (I have written in bold the words that were replaced to imitate accent )
- Whats the difference between `Hello` and `Hello there`?
"Hello" is a common greeting Perhaps the most common in English The addition of 'there' can be for a few reasons
- articles - another, an another or a another which one is . . .
Should I use "an" or "a" before the word "another"? If yes, when should use it Or I can just use quot;another quot; without any of those articles(a an
- What is the difference between I did and I have done
"I did" is the "simple past" form We use the Simple Past to express the idea that an action started and finished at a specific time in the past
- grammaticality - where are we vs where we are - English Language . . .
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- Whats the term for a person who can will do anything for money?
Nouns: Grafter 1, 2 (def 2 in both cases) Someone who engages in and benefits from graft, which is the abuse of one's position of (often political) power or authority for the purpose of gaining money by illegal or immoral means
- difference - why there is Vs . why is there - English Language . . .
According to the basic rules of English question formation, the word that comes after the question word (those are words like why, what, where etc ) is either one of the two auxiliary verbs (to do and to have), a modal verb (would, might, should etc ) or one of the numerous forms of the verb to be
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