
word choice - copy/pasting or copying/pasting? - English …
Should we write: I am copy/pasting the text Or: I am copying/pasting the text ?
word usage - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
As far as I understand copy-and-paste is used to mean the operation of copying, and pasting. If somebody did that, can I say (for example) the following? She copied-and-pasted what I wrote …
word choice - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Nov 12, 2021 · Both post and posting are the same according to Cambridge Dictionary (Android version). Both have the same meaning i.e. an electronic message that you send to a website …
Is there any difference between 'At this point' and 'To this point'?
Feb 1, 2023 · No, they are not: At this point in the conversation, I would like to tell that [blah blah blah]. At this point in our lives, etc. In response to that point you made about purple roses, I'd …
"to use" vs "in using" vs "in usage" - English Language Learners …
Italian people have some difficulties in usage of the word "interchange" and the phrase "each other". When I wrote that sentence some doubts arose to my mind in reference to the …
What's the meaning of "skirt off into a corner"?
Jul 11, 2023 · 'Do they skirt off into a corner? Or do they run up and say "hello" because they're nervous. The following image contains the other paragraphs from the text just in case it is …
to inf and keep - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Feb 19, 2017 · When do we use keep + to inf and keep + ing? I searched on the internet and did not find anything really accurate and precise on the topic.
Which is correct "start time" or "starting time"
I'd like to know which of the following is correct: "start time" or "starting time". An example is: He runs during period [t,t+c] every afternoon, where t is the start (or starting) time.
Do we have this structure "to glue something into something"?
Feb 6, 2025 · Both glued in and glued into are fine; glued to is not clear on how the pasting was done. Two lists of publications with the two possible usages are shown below:
Is it grammatically correct to say "ON the picture?"
I have never heard the phrase "on the picture" to mean "among the things|persons captured by the camera here". For that meaning, it is always "in the picture". Who is this person in the …