@EddieKal That is an interesting example, I certainly didn't bother to consider every definition of TO and OF. I think in your example it would be definable as 'the route taken to the destination. The key provides the method of access to the destination.
And I tried avoiding using TO in defining TO without success.
@RajorshiKoyal I certainly can check your writing if it's small. But as for what is important and relevant to your exam, I can't help at all. I am sorry, but I really have no idea about those exams.
And one more thing, request for proof-reading is not allowed on main site.
Is such construction allowed in those exams? > *We are asked to* **go write** *a 200 words passage*. It is fine for me and all others will pass it as correct but I am doubtful that such construction will be considered correct in those exams.
So, a question for moderators. Call me OCD but I wonder. Can't old questions with no accepted answers be 'cleared' when it is obvious there was an acceptable answer? Speaking specifically about the OP's long absence from Stack Exchange.
PSA: flagging a comment in chat raises a notification visible to ALL the several hundred moderators across the SE network, no matter which site they happen to moderate, and should be used ONLY for serious issues that require mod intervention.
Oh wow. That came out way more heavy-handed and officious than I meant it to!
No big deal or anything, just thought I'd let people know how the flagging system works.
@GWarner Questions are counted as "answered" if they have at least one answer with a positive score. Accepting is not really relevant, that just shows which answer the OP happened to prefer but isn't used anywhere else as far as I know.
@EddieKal Mods (and room owners, I think) can clear stars. When you hover over a starred message on the starboard, there's an action arrow and clicking on that gives you a menu.
I am aware of that. But here is my question and it is a serious question: What if the room owners and site moderators allowed insults, racially biased, to stay for a long period of time and the victim wanted to get to the bottom of it so despite the fact the victim was also a moderator themself they didn't wish to cancel the stars
I have been trying hard to understand how to use articles correctly. I read several English grammar books but they mostly provide only 5-6 rules for article usage. However, when I try to understand why an author used a, the or no article in a text, I have no idea where to look for it.
I am aware ...
I am still adjusting to Internet circles where I have to ask for someone's permission to talk informally with them, even if everybody else has asked and received permission from that person
But still, now that SE has matured into being like every other corporation, to the degree that they introduce a pointless font change that makes three lobes of my brain hurt when I'm reading, just because others do it too, SE users have also matured into being boring
Oh don't push your luck. Professional trolls have standards
Like, a very years back, SE was kinda growing up as I was growing up. It was fun.
On science site chats, you had the JEE gangs that flooded the sites with homework. On 'fun' sites, trolls were taking turns posting every other day with questions like "is Captain America gay"
I certainly hope SE is still growing. At least ELL and ELU need more users. I am surprised we see productive contributors leave but not people coming in. I mean don't they recruit new linguistics students every year?
@EddieKal I think they might, but you know, before 2018, it used to feel like the pet project of a bunch of cool college guys. The climate was just more intimate. I mean, of course that's not scalable, and it has all the problems I'm ranting that I miss, but there was a unique feeling of camaraderie, people treated communities like their own kids, carefully grooming posts and doing all the extra stuff on metas they didn't have to
1493: Uncovering the New World Columbus Created is a nonfiction book by Charles C. Mann first published in 2011. It covers the global effects of the Columbian Exchange, following Columbus' first landing in the Americas, that led to our current globalized world civilization. It follows on from Mann's previous book on the Americas prior to Columbus, 1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus.In his book, Mann argues that Columbus paved the way to the homogenocene, a particular feature of the anthropocene that is marked by a global homogenization of (agricultural) species, diseases, and...
Despite being lauded in New York Times and Washington Post, this book is really good
I am a native english speaker but i'll be damned if i know the terminolgy or the contruction methods to our language
i felt like i was going back and forth with another user. i said its not natural to say something that way. and thy answered its an indefinite article it has no tense.
@GWarner I feel you but it is oftentimes the non-native speaker who cling to grammar myths/illusions. Even "there is no rules to follow" has something to it.
@EddieKal I stumble on questions when a non-native talks about whether they need to use present tense possessive pronouns to describe objects.. :)
Well interestingly, I have one PC. Was given another. and recently a laptop. Up til now Chrome has been great all the way around. but now it says i have duplicate email accounts with multiple PWs..
I have a laptop, a desktop PC I use for listening to audiobooks, an old sublaptop that's very slow, and a half-disassembled desktop PC that just stands on the floor.
@EddieKal AH! I should check.
The sub-laptop has some missing keys. I should cannibalize it for its HDD (500 GB)
I had a huge 19" CRT monitor from Hitachi, a professional model. I gave it away for free to a young couple. They were very happy. They use it as a TV set.
@CowperKettle well the cat thinks the open laptop is hers, always trying to lay on the keyboard. The first one is connected to the TV since I dont have a monitor for it or a DVD player (it hasnt been turned on since before last winter
And it loves to lie on the upper tier of a set of bookshelves. We set up a set of boxes so that the cat can gradually get to the upper tier of bookshelves, almost near the ceiling. It lies there and looks at the people below.
funny a friend gave me his Dad's old AutoCAD 200 manual. At first I said no. but I kept it. I found the installs on archive.org. and activation keys online somewhere.
too complicated to be bothered to learn it. and i wouldnt use it anyway
If you put your head just below where the cat lies on its bookshelf eyrie, the cat will claw right at your scalp with its paws. It protects its territory.
@GWarner In my childhood flat in Noyabrsk, we had soundproofed one room by layering one side of a door with a thick layer of felt. The cat loved it. It allowed it to instantly get to the top of the door and sit there.
So we attached a layer of felt to a tall wardrobe, and the cat started climbing there too.
@CowperKettle I like that better then building a cat tree. Currently they are using an 8 foot length of rolled up carpeting that is propped against the cabinet and wall that was to be used for the cat tree, but it also prevents using that wall for anything else.