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03:10
0
Q: Believability Weighted

Yumi TadaI am reading a great book “Principles.” of Dalio, Ray There's a paraphrase called “Make believability-weighted decisions.” “• Make believability-weighted decisions. My painful mistakes shifted me from having a perspective of “I know I’m right” to having one of “How do I know I’m right?” The...

 
2 hours later…
04:41
0
Q: Can I ask to rate my English language level?

Aayvu.comCan I ask some one to rate the quality of English language by just writing few sentences on any topic? OR Can I write some paragraphs on some topic and ask to correct the grammatical mistakes and suggestion for improvisation? If this above requests cant be done at present. I would request it ...

 
8 hours later…
12:17
I came across the following statement in my email "Your balance is exhausted, So your ads have stopped running.", If I write the same thing, I would write "Your balance was exhausted, so your ads stopped running." Probably both mean same. but I am not matching with the native. Whats your comment on this?
Anonymous
12:31
In this case, exhausted is an adjective: macmillandictionary.com/dictionary/american/exhausted
Anonymous
That's why using is with it is natural.
Anonymous
It's a kind of adjective called a "participial adjective". This means the adjective is derived from a participial verb form.
Anonymous
Exhausted can also be a past participial verb form, as in your example, in which case was is grammatical.
Anonymous
So you're right, the meaning would be basically the same.
Anonymous
I feel like it might be a little more natural with is, though, just because it's a bit more common to use the derived adjective.
Anonymous
12:33
That's just my personal impression, though.
13:06
@snailplane I probably would write "Your balance has been exhausted, so your ads have stopped running." I'm not sure why - probably because "is exhausted" seems more like the "tired" definition than the "used up" definition to me. "Your balance is exhausted..." seems like it has just finished running a marathon :)
Anonymous
13:43
@ColleenV That's funny, that's the same thing I thought of when I read the version with was :-)
Anonymous
I probably wouldn't have used the word exhausted to begin with, although there isn't anything really wrong with it.
15:31
@snailplane Maybe "depleted" would have been better?
There is something weird about having "exhausted" and "running" in the same sentence and it not being about physical activity lol
Anonymous
15:55
I wanted to use "run out", but then I thought that might be bad with "run" in the second half.
19:07
Interesting question on the dark side:
1
Q: "I was starting suspecting something was wrong" <-- What's the grammar problem here?

Varun PatelI have been using “starting suspecting” frequently thinking that it’s correct too but recently my friend corrected me. I don't understand why. It is well-known that start to + verb and start verb-ing are interchangeable in terms of meaning: It started to rain. It started raining. T...

But it needs your reopen votes!!!
 
4 hours later…
22:47
@Araucaria is it really dark tho? It just looks more bloody
A helpless homework poster is sacrificed in a ritual every month

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