I am now making sure I get the essential facts about various cities in the Near East.
Oh! I remember: I was Googling for maps of the religions of Lebanon, and then I had to look up Sidon to make sure I knew whether or not the old city had been preserved and to what extent. (Answer: considerably, UN world heritage.)
> Historically, the Emperor of China saw himself as the center of the entire civilized world, and diplomatic relations in East Asia were based on the theory that all rulers of the world derived their authority from the Emperor. ... While not contradicting traditional Han Chinese theories of the emperor as universal ruler, the Qing did begin to make a distinction between areas of the world which they ruled and areas which they did not.
> The Adriatic Republic of Ragusa (presently Dubrovnik in Croatian Dalmatia) was a joint Habsburg-Ottoman protectorate from 20 August 1684 to 24 August 1798, so it exceptionally had both a Catholic and a Muslim protector
I've been using present simple and continuous for only two use cases, which are to describe something happens regularly and something that's happening right now respectively but I wasn't aware of there are many more use cases of these grammars lol...
I think grammar is tricky subject because people often use grammar without realising that whether it is present simple or continuous. Most people I met just use them randomly because it feels like they are correct.
I hate when they make video tutorials on these grammar mechanisms and talk about only surface information about them
O Lamm Gottes, unschuldig
Am Stamm des Kreuzes geschlachtet,
Sehet,—Was?—seht die Geduld,
Allzeit erfunden geduldig,
Wiewohl du warest verachtet.
Seht—Wohin?—auf unsre Schuld;
All Sünd hast du getragen,
Sonst müßten wir verzagen.
Sehet ihn aus Lieb und Huld
Holz zum Kreuze selber tragen!
Erbarm dich unser, o Jesu !
Guys, I know the difference between who and whom is the subject and object. Similarly, there is he and him. However, I don't clearly understand where to use whom in a sentence. I think I haven't really used whom very often before. Do you use it often? And can you give me some examples?
Widdershins (sometimes withershins, widershins or widderschynnes) means to take a course opposite the apparent motion of the sun viewed from the Arctic Circle, to go anti-clockwise or lefthandwise, or to circle an object by always keeping it on the left. The Oxford English Dictionary's entry cites the earliest uses of the word from 1513, where it was found in the phrase widdersyns start my hair, i.e. my hair stood on end.
The use of the word also means "in a direction opposite to the usual", and in a direction contrary to the apparent course of the sun. It is cognate with the German ...
I was told not to start a sentence with a conjunction words such as "but", "so", "because" and "and" but grammar.quickanddirtytips.com/… says you can start a sentence with a conjunction word "because" as long as the sentence is complete and not a fragment. Is this true and does it apply to all the other conjunction words?
I mean that it sorts this way: A=Á, B, C, CS, D, DZ, DZS, E=É, F, G, GY, H, I=Í, J, K, L, LY, M, N, NY, O=Ó, Ö=Ő, P, Q, R, S, SZ, T, TY, U=Ú, Ü=Ű, V, W, X, Y, Z, ZS.
Well, the Unicode locale rules for NL do not do that.
> Locales according to the default UCA rules include chr (Cherokee), de (German), en (English), ga (Irish), id (Indonesian), it (Italian), ka (Georgian), ms (Malay), nl (Dutch), pt (Portuguese), st (Southern Sotho), sw (Swahili), xh (Xhosa), zu (Zulu).
Note though that there is a “German phonebook” collation which is different.
Lijst van geslachten die zijn opgenomen in het genealogische naslagwerk Nederland's Patriciaat. De geslachten waarvan geen genealogie is opgenomen zijn tussen haken geplaatst en gemerkt met een asterisk (*); wanneer takken met dubbele namen tot één geslacht behoren zijn die takken bij de stamnaam opgenomen, gescheiden van elkaar door een Duitse komma.
A
Van der Aa (geslacht) • Aalbersberg / Aalbertsberg • Abbing / Roscam Abbing (geslacht) • Abeleven • Aberson / Colson Aberson / van der Hardt Aberson / Wigeri Aberson • d'Abo • Acquoy (geslacht) • Adema / Hora Adema • Adriani / van der Tuuk ...
de__phonebook German (umlaut as 'ae', 'oe', 'ue')
es__traditional Spanish ('ch' and 'll' as a grapheme)
fi Finnish (v and w are primary equal)
fi__phonebook Finnish (v and w as separate characters)
etc
Oh.
Maybe grapheme is what we were looking for. Hm. Unsure.
sv Swedish (v and w are primary equal)
sv__reformed Swedish (v and w as separate characters)
zh Chinese
zh__big5han Chinese (ideographs: big5 order)
zh__gb2312han Chinese (ideographs: GB-2312 order)
zh__pinyin Chinese (ideographs: pinyin order) [3]
zh__stroke Chinese (ideographs: stroke order) [3]
zh__zhuyin Chinese (ideographs: zhuyin order) [3]
I have some code that sorts table columns by object properties. It occurred to me that in Japanese or Chinese (non-alphabetical languages), the strings that are sent to the sort function would be compared the way an alphabetical language would.
Take for example a list of Japanese surnames:
寿拘
...
But the problem, in Japanese at least, is what do you do with names, which are all in kanji, and which can have different phonemic readings—sometimes vastly different.
But they don't really differ in a way that is meaningful to native readers.
> Chinese and Japanese character strings are sorted by Unicode code points, and their ordering may be predicated on a rationale that may be in some way intelligible to knowledgeable readers but is not likely to be of much practical value in helping users to find the information they're seeking.
> The main Unicode CJK Unified Ideographs block happens to be ordered by radical and number of strokes (Kangxi dictionary order), which may be vaguely useful. But use characters from any of the other CJK extension blocks, or mix in some kana, or romaji, and there will be no meaningful ordering between them.
@KitFox Cabinets will be Decora cherry in wheatstone (wheatfield?) stain. Counter tops are Cambria Cuddington. (Kind of a French vanilla with a subtle stone pattern.)
Porcelain 12"-square tiles with marbled non-repeating pattern.
There is some kind of law about kitchens that no matter how big they are, if two people are in the kitchen they will both need to be in the same place at the same time.
I read a document regarding to prepositions in English grammar and at the very beginning of this document, it mentions, only way to know the verb "dispose" is followed by the preposition "of" is through experience. It almost sounded like there are no grammatical rules for the topic prepositions a...
What's the meaning of "reflective market comment" in "This week has seen a rest in some currencies’ volatility and much reflective market comment following the “beginning of QE’s end” instilled by the Fed and BSI"
What's the meaning of "not dull however" in "Not dull however; we hear Facebook cheerleaders the Winklevoss twins, whilst acknowledging alternative currencies may become illegal, have applied to float a US fund based on Bitcoin"
@Meysam I assume that the previous chunk of new had been described as dull, so that phrase means that this bit of news isn't dull, unlike that last bit.
I've tried Googling for an answer to this but have got nowhere.
I have one SQL Server instance whose replication is set up to be a publisher and a distributor of FooDatabase. I have a second instance whose replication is set up to be a subscriber of FooDatabase on the first instance. Replicati...
i don't know exactly use of this all word. so, Please Can you help me to clear my idea with all this word?
in which situation i can use this keyword?
Thanks in advance..