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2:28 AM
> A lot more remains/remain to be said.
One student told me that in that sentence remains is wrong. But I think both of them are possible.
 
2:48 AM
What do you think?
 
@DamkerngT. That's but one example (and permissively speaking, it's not even colloquially ungrammatical I guess). There are more than 300 hundred others, 40 of which from the last 60 years. (I admit it is not much, but not nothing either.)
And I asked Matt, and "No, I haven't." is a valid response for him:
in English Language & Usage, 6 hours ago, by Matt E. Эллен
@Færd more likely to say "no I haven't"
So I guess the rule holds, but only with the hedgings modern and commonly.
And as for the use of modal have in AmE, there are 138 hits for "I have not/n't a" in COCA, and I bet if we count all the instances of modal have in COCA they will exceed a thousand. I don't see why we should dismiss all that as said by Brits. Maybe a BrE influence can account for this. After all, there are Americans who speak a more Br-friendly English, like Stoney over here and some folks over at ELU I bet you know.
 
3:03 AM
@Man_From_India Actually I guess remains is the better choice, if not the only one.
 
@Færd thanks.
 
If a plural antecedent is conceivable for a lot, then remain can be possible too. But I don't think that is the case.
@Man_From_India I'm just giving my worthless opinion, but no problem.
 
@Færd I also think it that way. Without context it's hard to determine. So I picked up both as possible options. But in this particular case, without context remains looks much better.
 
Anonymous
3:47 AM
@Færd Auxiliary, not modal.
 
Anonymous
I haven't a clue is definitely borrowing from BrE, if it appears in AmE.
 
0
Q: Can a clause be non-restrictive if it starts with "to"?

TimIn the sentence, "I've been thinking of getting a car[,] to travel to further places," would "to travel to further places" be a non-restrictive clause?

 
Anonymous
There is some obvious influence from AmE on BrE and vice versa, and you can find BrE speakers in COCA quite commonly of course. I expect you're right that there's some influence, but I think the effect is likely much smaller than you imagine.
 
Anonymous
Usually when I find things like that in COCA, when I investigate, I turn out to be right that they're BrE speakers, although in many cases there's also BrE speech emulated in fiction.
 
It's ambiguous whether to travel to further places acts as a complement to the NP a car, a the modifier of the same NP or an adjunct of the whole clause.
 
Anonymous
3:50 AM
But of course, you're free to investigate.
 
Anonymous
I remain unconvinced.
 
Anonymous
@Man_From_India [A car to travel to further places] is what I've been thinking of getting and [Getting a car to travel to further places] is what I need to do. Something like that?
 
Anonymous
We should probably change to further places to something more natural.
 
No the sentence was
> I have been thinking of getting a car to travel to further places.
 
Anonymous
I can see the sentence. I was trying to put both versions into subject position to see whether they work as constituents.
 
3:52 AM
hmmm, it's I think ambiguous.
 
Anonymous
Me too.
 
@DamkerngT. To bicameal probably derives from to bike a meal, which is a a way to describe in Standard Iranian English, for example, @M.A.R. eating a handful of dates while riding to school.
 
Anonymous
Hmm, my test isn't quite perfect, though.
 
Anonymous
My second example is still ambiguous.
 
@snailplane right.
 
3:54 AM
@Man How am I? Hungry. Where are you now?
 
One problematic area is to determine whether a particular constituent is a complement or a modifier of a NP.
@JimReynolds looks like I have to flee before I ....
 
Anonymous
I really need to go eat something to make my brain work :-)
 
You can have a banana
It has potassium
 
@DamkerngT. Was that a hiss or did you feel it was a kind of sigh? I have a hard time picturing a cat sighing.
@Man_From_India Haha. Don't run or exercise too much. The best-tasting meats are well marbled with fat. I'm doing fine. I'm pretty busy, but the next step in my biggest and most time-sensitive project is to interview someone who is sick right now. So I'm chatting a bit(?) lately in response to the demands of my fans.
@snailplane An interesting study out suggesting that proteins found in wheat (and rye and barley) creates disorder in the inflammatory cycle, inside the gut and out.
 
4:06 AM
@JimReynolds celiac disease?
 
hm non-celiac
I don't see a PubMed link
Hope it's a good source
 
@snailplane Well, seeing you refute that so forcefully doesn't leave me much to say. I'll take your stand as authoritative for the time being. Thanks.
@snailplane Typical of me to make such mistakes.
 
The source is identified in the article.
 
> Findings were presented at UEG Week 2016 in Vienna in Vienna, Austria
I like articles that give direct links to PubMed (0:
 
4:09 AM
Let me try to find it.
 
I shared it on Facebook to read later (0:
 
I think this is not yet published, but so far was a poster presentation, or description of work in progress given at an academic conference. This seems to be the root resource currently available: ueg.eu/press/releases/ueg-press-release/article/…
 
Anonymous
@Færd I'm sorry, I should be a little more moderate. I'm kind of dizzy and anemic at the moment, and it's probably making me grumpy :-)
 
Anonymous
You're definitely right that there is some influence between the two.
 
Anonymous
I should write up a more considered response later.
 
4:22 AM
I'm getting ready to consider an essentially "paleo" diet. The gluten-free "nuts" seem to have perhaps been onto something. We'll have to see how other experts digest this, and what further research might secrete.
 
Anonymous
Paleo isn't such a bad thing. But I think that if you do it, consider adding some things that aren't truly "paleo", like potatoes.
 
Anonymous
@JimReynolds I don't like being anemic. :-(
 
Anonymous
I'm about to eat a big ol' plate of meat.
 
Does paleo include meat?
 
Anonymous
Yes.
 
4:24 AM
@snailplane get well, Snails!
 
Bon appetit!
There are versions of it, and versions of versions.
 
Anonymous
The basic idea behind paleo is eating food that people ate in paleolithic times, long before the diseases associated with the modern Western diet became common.
 
I picked up my blood test results this morn, and my TSH is ideal, 1.6 ^_^
 
Anonymous
Of course, there's a rather large stretch of time after the paleolithic era before the modern diet that we can learn from, too :-)
 
Anonymous
@CowperKettle Yippee!
 
Anonymous
4:26 AM
My hemoglobin and hematocrit are below the bottom end of the range they're supposed to be in.
 
Anonymous
And my red blood cells are low, too.
 
But testosterone is a bit low. (0:
 
I'm looking at this as a point of departure, atm: coolinginflammation.blogspot.tw/2008/09/…
 
Anonymous
Oh, is that something they need to fix?
 
@snailplane It had low periods in the past, and there are ways to fix it
 
4:27 AM
@snailplane Meat? :O I thought u only eat plant-meats :-)
 
Looks like I'm generally prone to low hormones.
@snailplane Because of all the treatment?
 
Have you tried receiving some good kicks to the groin?
Just thinking intuitively here.
 
No, I just took some injections of gonadotropin
 
Anonymous
@CowperKettle Yep! My iron is okay, but now I'm anemic.
 
Anonymous
@Man_From_India I used to be a vegetarian.
 
Anonymous
4:29 AM
I think that my health is better if I eat meat, though.
 
@snailplane welcome to the group of Jim's :P
 
@snailplane Of course you should eat it. With your condition, this is a must.
 
@snailplane yup
 
That guy I cited said he thinks people can do fine without meat, if our intestinal ecosystem is healthy.
 
Anonymous
Ehh.
 
4:30 AM
Yes, they can.
They only need to keep tabs on their B12 levels.
 
Anonymous
I think it depends.
 
Anonymous
@CowperKettle I'm not convinced that's enough.
 
I think it depends, too.
 
My bicyclist lady friend nearly died when she went vegetarian. Now she takes B12 injections. And all is fine, she rides her bicycle and goes to work and stuff, with no problems.
 
Anonymous
B12 is very important though, of course.
 
Anonymous
4:32 AM
I don't really know what to eat to help my hemoglobin / red blood cells / hematocrit levels.
 
Anonymous
I can ask my hematologist next week :-)
 
Maybe there are some other factors that should be corrected with veg diet. I dunno.
@snailplane You can try googling! (0:
 
There are clearly-demonstrated associations between higher red meat consumption and chronic diseases, but the problem is, Lots of meat together with what?
Iron levels ok, but anemic?
 
Anonymous
@JimReynolds Iron deficiency is one cause of anemia.
 
Anonymous
Anemia itself is low hemoglobin or red blood cell count.
 
4:35 AM
@snailplane You can use sci-hub to download a good PDF review on the treatment of your condition. That review might mention corrective actions in case hemoglobin etc go down.
the website "eMedicine" is also a great source
 
Anonymous
@JimReynolds Stephan Guyenet has a series: wholehealthsource.blogspot.com/2014/10/…
 
Does that mean iron levels in normal range, but not optimum for you?
Hmm... Of course. Any weak link in the chain.
@snailplane I'll take a lookie
 
Anonymous
@JimReynolds Oh wait, click here instead: wholehealthsource.blogspot.com/2015/03/…
 
Anonymous
That contains links to the whole series.
 
You might have an anemic attitude. Snap out of it.
 
4:36 AM
> Some researchers believe that hemochromatosis originated more than 40,000 years ago in the area we now know as Ireland with a single person whose genes mutated so that he or she could over-absorb iron to compensate for an iron-poor diet.
> No product here the barren hills afford,
But man and steel, the soldier and his sword.
Too much metal in blood
 
Repeat this while looking in the mirror: I'm good enough to be nemic.
 
Anonymous
@CowperKettle There was a hypothesis published a few years back about hemochromatosis and the Black Death.
 
Anonymous
That hemochromatosis might have provided plague resistance.
 
ah
Nice
Just like that sickle cell anemia is a resistance factor in the warmer climes
Sickle cell trait (or sicklemia) describes a condition in which a person has one abnormal allele of the hemoglobin beta gene (is heterozygous), but does not display the severe symptoms of sickle cell disease that occur in a person who has two copies of that allele (is homozygous). Those who are heterozygous for the sickle cell allele produce both normal and abnormal hemoglobin (the two alleles are codominant with respect to the actual concentration of hemoglobin in the circulating cells). Sickle cell disease is a blood disorder in which there is a single amino acid substitution in the hemoglobin...
 
Anonymous
4:40 AM
@JimReynolds In my case, the anemia is probably from blood loss.
 
There's evidence, apparently, that the high omega 3 content in saturated animal fats (and olive oil) can't do it's good thing if the balance vs omega 6 lipids isn't sufficiently high.
There's eating meat, then there's eating factory-farmed animals, pumped full of antibiotics, and accumulating toxins from their feed in their fat.
@snailplane You like your doctor, I guess?
Well, go eat your meat! How are you preparing it, or how was it prepared?
Don't eat the horns. They can get stuck in your throat.
 
@snailplane You should investigate your disease. Doctors have little time and may miss some aspects, however good they are.
 
Anonymous
@JimReynolds I don't really understand the question.
 
Anonymous
@CowperKettle I have read a lot about it.
 
Good!
 
Anonymous
4:44 AM
@JimReynolds It's white chicken breast.
 
Anonymous
With salt and pepper.
 
Do you have confidence in your doctor? Are they receptive to your ideas?
 
Anonymous
The 'white' there was redundant. I really think my brain is not working very well.
 
Anonymous
@JimReynolds Umm, she seems good.
 
Wheat has been genetically modified to have more and more "natural" resistance to pests. Unfortunately, it seems that those toxins may disorder our inflammatory systems.
 
Anonymous
4:49 AM
I don't know if there's really any evidence for wheat causing inflammation in the general population.
 
There are older and newer ways to genetically modify, of course. The seeds in Grock's patch blowing over into Grunk's patch is genetic modification, no?
 
Anonymous
There's a minority of the population that it does affect, and I think that's established.
 
I think there's evidence pointing to a stronger probability of that. Especially with this recent study. But yes, the results are applied to a sub-population.
 
Anonymous
There is a lot of anti-wheat junk science out there right now.
 
Anonymous
Like Wheat Belly.
 
4:54 AM
If this is good research, though, a key finding is "The study shows that the consumption of ATIs can lead to the development of inflammation in tissues beyond the gut, including the lymph nodes, kidneys, spleen and brain."
Yes.
In who? Etc?
It seems that the essential new information is the effect of these proteins outside the intestine.
Why do they conclude it could "worsen" certain inflammatory-driven chronic illnesses, but don't address causation in general? I dunno.
 
Anonymous
@JimReynolds Do you have non-celiac gluten sensitivity, or celiac disease?
 
5:24 AM
Hi @Man_From_India
Hi to All !!!
 
5:47 AM
Hi
 
Hi.
 
Hope All fine !!!!
A question is unanswered......
 
Anonymous
6:03 AM
@JimReynolds Speaking of nutrition: ell.stackexchange.com/q/107181/230
 
Anonymous
Anti-carb sentiment is still somewhat popular these days.
 
Well, a human being needs at least 100 g of carbs a day, or else his Krebs cycle will stop cycling
The citric acid cycle – also known as the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle or the Krebs cycle – is a series of chemical reactions used by all aerobic organisms to generate energy through the oxidation of acetyl-CoA derived from carbohydrates, fats and proteins into carbon dioxide and chemical energy in the form of adenosine triphosphate. In addition, the cycle provides precursors of certain amino acids as well as the reducing agent NADH that is used in numerous other biochemical reactions. Its central importance to many biochemical pathways suggests that it was one of the earliest established...
Some could be produced from fat deposits, of course
 
Anonymous
@CowperKettle Well, ketones.
 
gluconeogenesis
(a good title for an anime cartoon)
 
Anonymous
@CowperKettle Oh, right! I'd forgotten about gluconeogenesis from glycerol.
 
Anonymous
 
Anonymous
22.3.7
 
6:27 AM
How to Use "would have to" ? Could you please tell me About its usage?

I have created the following sentences which I don't know if correct or not :

1. If I needed more money in the future,I would have to do a better job.

But I hear people using "would have to" without the "if clause". I don't know why people use that way either.
 
6:43 AM
@snailplane Aww! My bad!
 
@CowperKettle what ?
 
I've essentially operated on Which kinds of carbs? And what else is eaten or not? Fairly successfully reducing simple/refined/free/added sugars, probably by 90% since I used to be a sugar fiend. Refusing refined and processed foods, when other choices are convenient, and organizing my life somewhat so that those choices are more often convenient. Reduced red meat, lots of whole grains. Not sure how I feel about milk.
This article hits me with a bit of a bang on the whole grain thing. Or the whole whole grain thing!
I don't know how much I will shift as a result of this alone, but it's making me read more, and focused my attention.
 
7:02 AM
Crab yummmm!
 
Man from india what I asked
 
Anonymous
@yubrajsharma We need more context to answer why.
 
Anonymous
Otherwise, we don't have enough information.
 
Anonymous
Do you have an example?
 
A: What did you do yesterday?
B: I repaired the broken window.
A: Ah yes, you would have to do that. Broken windows are dangerous.
A: What are you doing now?
B: I am repairing the broken window.
A: Ah yes, you would have to do that. Broken windows are dangerous."
A: What are you going to do tomorrow?
B: I will repair the broken window.
A: Ah yes, you would have to do that. Broken windows are dangerous."
Freddy sneezed on the cakes. He would have to go and do that.
What's the usage of would have to ?
 
7:18 AM
> The material is considered to have passed the test if no less than 80% of exposed embryos survive (probably should be not less)
> The chorioallantoic membranes of all the embryos should present no changes visible to the naked eye. (is this okay, or is there some other technical phrase for this?)
 
@Man_From_India examples are there! !!
 
7:40 AM
Guess who they are?
Volga Germans, now living in remote villages in the Ural Region
Germans were invited to settle along Volga River by Empress Catherine in the 18th century
In 1941, they were deported to Kazakstan and some wound up in the Urals
 
8:05 AM
Word of the noon: gross examination
 
8:18 AM
@CowperKettle it's OK, I checked.
 
@V.V. thank you!
 
8:46 AM
> She burn'd with love, as straw with fire flameth;
She burn'd out love, as soon as straw outburneth;
She fram'd the love, and yet she foil'd the framing;
She bade love last, and yet she fell a turning.
What could be the meaning of "she framed the love and yet she foiled the framing"?
 
9:09 AM
1
Q: Meaning of "She framed the love, and yet she foiled the framing"

CowperKettleFrom Shakespeare: Fair is my love, but not so fair as fickle; Mild as a dove, but neither true nor trusty; Brighter than glass, and yet, as glass is, brittle; Softer than wax, and yet, as iron, rusty: A lily pale, with damask die to grace her, None fairer, nor none falser to def...

 
 
1 hour later…
10:29 AM
@JimReynolds It was more like snorting. :-)
But purposefully, like people do. :-)
 
10:47 AM
@snailplane Why would you apologize? That was totally alright.
 
11:22 AM
Mornin peeps
 
 
1 hour later…
12:36 PM
Morn!
StoneyB gave a great answer to the above question.
 
Here are some sentences about "would have to":

If I needed more money in the future,I would have to do a better job.
2.Freddy sneezed on the cakes. He would have to go and do that.

A: What did you do yesterday? B: I repaired the broken window. A: Ah yes, you would have to do that. Broken windows are dangerous.
A: What are you doing now ? B: I am repairing the broken window. A: Ah yes, you would have to do that. Broken windows are dangerous."
A: What are you going to do tomorrow ? B: I will repair the broken window. A: Ah yes, you would have to do that. Broken windows are dangerous."
@snailplane Hi
 
1:51 PM
My reputation is so round, it might roll down the hill.
 
2:44 PM
In an online exam prep question I found something interesting
> Driven by the desire to save trees residents of locality has started using solar appliances for their everyday needs.
It says this sentence is wrong, to make it correct you have to use being driven by the desire...
 
@Man_From_India Well yeah, but isn't 'residents' plural?
 
But I'm shocked to know that the former sentence headed by driven by the desire is marked incorrect. In fact that sentence is more natural than Being driven by the desire.
I know that in LGSWE it says Gerund-Participle is more common than Past-Participle clause as an adjunct. But in this case it's not the case.
Here Past-Participle clause is more common than Gerund_Participle clause.
 
Yeah.
 
Further I studied about it, and noticed that it's not only with the verb - driven, some verbs like dressed also shows such thing.
 
I don't have a problem with 'driven'.
But 'residents has'?!
Inexcusable.
 
2:51 PM
@snailplane I hope you can help me with this. Is there any grammatical explanation behind Past-Participle clause to be preferred over Gerund-Participle clause. Generally as Biber et al says as an adjunct Gerund-Participle clause is more common than Past-Participle clause.
@M.A.R. Nice find. Thanks!
 
I didn't find anything
I just expressed my opinion
 
I overlooked it :-)
 
@DamkerngT.
> The Great Suspender is a lightweight chrome extension to help reduce chrome's memory footprint for users that like to have too many tabs open at the same time. This extension will automagically unload each tab while retaining its favicon and title text.
 
3:11 PM
@DamkerngT., do Tuk-tuks really exist in Bangkok?
 
tuk-tuks?
small vehicles?
 
@V.V. Google says they do
@CowperKettle It looks like a tricycle, but bigger
And for adults
 
@V.V. Oh, yes, they're real, and they're very popular among tourists!
@CowperKettle Thanks for the tip!
 
@DamkerngT. Only tourists?
 
Mostly, but they're all over Bangkok, though it's easier to find a taxi cab than a tuk-tuk, except in some parts of Bangkok.
 
3:21 PM
People go nuts over things they haven't seen before.
Large tricycles aren't an exception
 
Although the name is funny
 
If you've watched Ongbak, you may be able to remember this scene:
@M.A.R. The name is based on its sound!
 
I haven't.
@DamkerngT. Hehe, that's even funnier
 
3:23 PM
Electric tri-cycle is common in here too. Though we have hand drawn rickshaw, and tri-cycle run by manually paddling.
 
Recently, China introduced their motor-tricycles over here as well. I'm a bit worried about the future of our tuk-tuk.
Their models are not as robust, but they're cheaper.
 
We have auto.
 
@DamkerngT. Well, cars came. Did horse carts go extinct? Nope.
 
We call it auto rickshaw
 
Tuk Tuk UK!
 
3:26 PM
And the image name is 'tuk tuk'
@DamkerngT. Tuk tucking tuk
Tuk the tuck tuk
 
Well, autocorrect didn't believe my typing!
 
I believe in your typing.
Just not in your typoes
 
Thanks! -- Oh, hehe!
 
This is what Google gives me for "tuk tuk"
Door-selling shops in Yekaterinburg
 
LOL
 
3:30 PM
Because "tuk tuk" is the sound of someone knocking on the door in Russia
like "knock-knock"
 
How much is left to Trampoline and Clingon's Battle Finale?
It's hard to keep track since I'm not American and I don't have to take in so much crap.
 
> But that Woodman and that Farmer, though they work unceasingly, work silently, and no one heard them as they went about with muffled tread: the rather, forasmuch as to entertain any suspicion that they were awake, was to be atheistical and traitorous.
2
Another interesting sentence by Dickens.
the rather was to be ...!
 
No idea. I can't parse it well.
 
@DamkerngT. O.O
I keep reading it 'the latter'
 
4:09 PM
You may need to be able to write prose beautifully to drive a cab in London. On the other hand, you may not need to know where well-known places are to drive a cab in New York. :-)
Everything is arbitrary!
 
4:49 PM
> If the expected result is not obtained, the material is considered to have failed the test.
Could this be somehow remodeled to look better, I wonder.
> If the expected result is not obtained, the test of the material is a failure
> Failure to obtain the expected result with the material indicates a failure of the test
> The material that has failed to produce the expected result .. d'oh
Seems like a similar English sentence would just never use the word "material"
 
considered to fail the test is a little better, I think.
 
hmm.
would not that mean "the material should fail the test (in the future)"?
 
@DamkerngT. i can't get the meaning of it. Strange!
 
It's a condition. The zeroth conditional, in some grammar book, I think.
 
@DamkerngT. Interesting!
So "to have failed" is odd.
 
4:58 PM
I read the rather was to be as "this would rather be ..."
 
I want to dump "considered" ():
> If the expected result is not obtained, the test of the material is a failure.
 
@CowperKettle It sounds a bit unexpected to me in this kind of writing.
 
> If the expected result is not obtained, the material fails the test.
 
I think this may sound a bit more authoritative: In the case that the expected result is not obtained/available, the material is considered to fail the test.
 
I should ask a question on main site whether "considered to fail" is okay (0:
 
5:01 PM
I'm not sure how it's used in the context.
I assumed it was something like a rule.
 
Yes, it's like a rule. The previous two sentences say that the PCR procedure should only give product (amplified bits of DNA) if our material is of the same genomic type as the primers used (primers are bits that "anneal" to the DNA and promote duplication)
If the PCR procedure gives odd products, then we call the thing off
Call it a failure
 
nods
The test, or the material, is the failure?
 
The material "has not passed control" (the Russian sentence says). I remade that into "failed the test" (0:
 
nods
 
Because I've no idea how to put the Russian phrase "has not passed control" into English with the word "control"
has not passed inspection, probably
 
5:06 PM
nods
 
Anonymous
@Man_From_India Wow! It looks like a golf cart had a baby with the Mystery Machine.
 
Inspection sounds good.
@snailplane LOL
@DamkerngT. How? — Ahmad yesterday
Strange! This is not in my inbox!
 
@DamkerngT. I wonder if we can say "the material has failed this condition"
"the material is rejected by failing this condition"
 
@CowperKettle I think most of these are okay.
 
I've re-read the whole page, and this stuff is not actually the test. It's part of the "acceptance criteria".
These criteria determine whether the overall test's results could be trusted.
 
Anonymous
5:13 PM
@CowperKettle I think that could be okay.
 
Ahh
 
Anonymous
@DamkerngT. Maybe considered to have failed the test
 
nods
 
@snailplane oh, "have failed" is okay! Thank you!
Okay, I'll make it "to have failed this condition" (or "this control condition") ^_^
hmm - we have this word in English, like "checkpoint"
When a pilot on a plane goes through a list of things that should be right
just before takeoff
and each "wrong" will result in staying on the ground
This is like this in my text
 
Ahh
 
5:17 PM
If the PCR procedure produces some odd product (cat primers somehow multiply DNA from a dog cell) this means the whole (larger) test is not accepted, because this "dog cell material" failed this condition. ^_^
 
:D
@Ahmad It's a bit complicated, but when I write this kind of stuff, everything I write is usually on purpose. It's not easy to rephrase your example because I don't know the intent.
> The extraction command was described in the previous section. For example, according to this command, the content of exData may be enclosed in an Xml node whose label is specified in the extraction command. [ or / Also / Moreover / As another example / in another command / In addition, ] a regular expression may be applied to exData in order to extract and store only specific parts of it.
The purpose of the two examples (For example, EXAMPLE1. ??? EXAMPLE2.) is not clear to me. That's why I think rewriting is probably a good idea.
(One tells us where or how exData is located or specified. The other tells us how to process exData. But the lead sentence is about "extraction command".)
In short, you were looking for a solution to improve the cohesion, but I think you could do better by improving its coherence.
 
It would be nice, that is a much better answer, if you included links to the definitions you list. — Alan Carmack 2 hours ago
He probably downvoted Stoney's answer
 
5:33 PM
OF ~ Old French, perhaps.
 
Anonymous
@DamkerngT. Yes
 
Yay!
 
Anonymous
Same word, different spelling.
 
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