The sentence I'm going to be talking about... is future continuous and I've always been taught that it is sloppy and indirect. You're correction of I'm going to talk about... is more proper. Unfortunately too many people have adopted the future continuous in speech and it is so common most people...
going to be uses the passive voice for a future event. Put it in an essay and a competent professor will mark it incorrect every time. It's sloppy plain and simple. In regards to your first comment try and quote the original poster accurately before you downvote and comment. — afrederick44 mins ago
Hey, question for the group because I'm too lazy to investigate it for myself. Does Gaelic have any relation to Gaul, historically or etymologically speaking?
@MrShinyandNew安宇 then just click on the "tools" link from time to time, make yourself at home there. You can get a reader's digest of the best of the best and the worst of the worst, see what questions are getting closed or reopened, and throw in your vote for good measure.
@Robusto more like the latter. Because as per the contract I signed page I looked at, my job here is to be invisible and do as little as possible, or even less.
Clearly, Hamlet and Aladdin have eponymous characters (namely, Hamlet and Aladdin). What about The Merchant of Venice and The Little Mermaid? Are Antonio and Ariel eponymous?
A dictionary-check suggests some conflict on this point. Merriam-Webster says:
of, relating to, or being the person o...
In Gallo-Roman religion, Epona was a protector of horses, donkeys, and mules. She was particularly a goddess of fertility, as shown by her attributes of a patera, cornucopia, ears of grain and the presence of foals in some sculptures suggested that the goddess and her horses were leaders of the soul in the after-life ride, with parallels in Rhiannon of the Mabinogion. Unusually for a Celtic deity, most of whom were associated with specific localities, the worship of Epona, "the sole Celtic divinity ultimately worshipped in Rome itself," was widespread in the Roman Empire between the fir...
Erythropoietin, or its alternatives erythropoetin or erthropoyetin (, , or ) or EPO, is a glycoprotein hormone that controls erythropoiesis, or red blood cell production. It is a cytokine (protein signaling molecule) for erythrocyte (red blood cell) precursors in the bone marrow.
Also called hematopoietin or hemopoietin, it is produced by interstitial fibroblasts in the kidney in close association with peritubular capillary and tubular epithelial cells. It is also produced in perisinusoidal cells in the liver. While liver production predominates in the fetal and perinatal period, re...
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (known as Teenage Mutant Hero Turtles in Europe due to controversy at the time) is an American animated television series produced by Murakami-Wolf-Swenson. The pilot was shown during the week of December 28, 1987 in syndication as a five part miniseries and began its official run on October 1, 1988.
The initial motivation behind the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles animated series was that, upon being approached to create a toy line, Playmates Toys was uneasy with the comic book characters' small cult following. They requested that a television deal be acquire...
We were talking at lunch about what we should send to an alien civilization to best represent the human race to them. Everybody was going down the list of classics, art, music, etc. My vote was for Hillbilly Handfishin'.
Hillbilly Handfishin' is an American reality television show about noodling, the sport of fishing for catfish using only bare hands and feet. A 12-episode season premiered on Animal Planet on August 7, 2011. The show stars Oklahoma fishermen Skipper Bivins and Trent Jackson, self-proclaimed "hillbillies" who take tourists from cities on noodling expeditions in muddy lakes, rivers and streams. Hillbilly Handfishin' was developed by Sara Helman and produced by Half Yard Productions, the executive producers for which are Abby Greensfelder and Sean Gallagher.
The Bivins family runs Big Fish A...
I'd be interested in hearing casual choices. e.g. using a word that would usually be an adjective or a verb as a noun feels unnatural. — allyourcode18 hours ago
This is the problem with Internet software. It's never finished. With desktop software, it's finished because you have to ship something. With net software, everybody keeps tweaking and chiseling and fixing shit that ain't broke.
I have an open-ended problem for which I need a descriptive English word, it goes like this:
A and B are co-workers but B sees himself more like a King and A as inferior. 1. A requires a better system instead of email -spamming from the Head, B blocks the request (a bit evil way) 2. B disagrees because the "current" system works 3. A emails B due to work -duties 4. B does not answer because of "spam"/too-much-info/too-much-work ---> B exploits the current system not do his duties ---> A cannot do his duties because of the poor system
It could be described the best with game-theory with open information and closed information, surely some more exact words here but missing the terminology.
I. A probably wins with open-information. B probably wins with closed information. II. B tries to kill all communication channels and make communication look complicated so that A cannot move the things around B. III. A strategy is ofc to make information more open.
A bit dilemma...B may get sacked, A may get sacked -- or some sort of compromise, no win-win not sure.
How would you analyze passive-aggressive things? A looks pretty aggressive when A needs to do his works. B is lazy passive person just blocking things, by which words to analyze this?
There are surely some crux English words to think around the situation.
(A is required to do things but cannot due to B, B insults A because of not doing things but A cannot do things because of B...vicious circle...)
A catch-22 is a paradoxical situation in which an individual cannot avoid a problem because of contradictory constraints or rules. Often these situations are such that solving one part of a problem only creates another problem, which ultimately leads back to the original problem. Catch-22s often result from rules, regulations, or procedures that an individual is subject to but has no control over.
The term catch-22 was coined by Joseph Heller in his novel Catch-22. Initially this is based on the explanation of the character Doc Daneeka as to why any pilot requesting a psych evaluation hop...
I have called B's staretegies as "Russian" strategies (not sure whether descriptive but anyway), B pretty much kills A's possibilities.
1. piling up 100 years' workload on A (not making A able to do his duties) 2. B uses all "free" money to his parties to Russia with his friends (this is no joke, A has noted this). 3. B claims that they are living in tight budget when A asks pretty small extra budjet under <<<1% to invest in better system
I don't know what this is but there are certainly a lot of details to analyze.