@Cerberus The case I have trouble with is where someone's posted an answer that's 75% of the way there, but not quite right... if I was totally into rep-whoring I'd just post a new answer with the missing bits added, but I usually just comment giving the extra piece of info...
@kiamlaluno Just the gravatar? Or one of the, ahem, modified versions?
In most tenses, Greek has only active in middle voice; in the aorist and future, all three exist, in which case 3. is impossible as a translation of the middle voice, because for that meaning the passive voice would be used.
No, the middle voice is purely morphological: elusa = active aorist; elusamên = middle aorist; eluthên = passive aorist.
1, 2, and 3 are all possible translations of the middle voice, depending on context and tense.
"The ask is that you provide me with..."
I started hearing "ask" being used as a noun a few years ago. Is this a recent trend? Is it an East Coast thing, unique to North America, or just unique to the in-house vocabulary of telecommunications companies?
For example:
Italy = Italia
Florence = Firenze
Rome = Roma
Venice = Venezia
Different reasons for different cities? Anglicised for pronunciation? The name changed and English didn't follow suit?
Going off of the "haitch" vs "aitch" debate, what is the correct pronunciation of v? is it "vee" with a f-type mouth placement or a "wee" or "wi" like the game console?
Hi,
Is "act quickly" and "gives you" as in "Xpto tracks xyz bounces. It gives you real-time statistics and details so you can act quickly" correctly said?
Thanks
Hi,
Can you help me out please?
Is this correct:
"Xpto tracks xyz bounces. It gives you
real-time statistics and details so
you can act quickly."
.
I have a feeling that is not good English :/ Can you please help me out creating a better headline?
Thanks!!!
What is the difference between a question and an invitation?
Is there any difference?
Do they accomplish different things?
Are they structurally different?
Going off of the "haitch" vs "aitch" debate, what is the correct pronunciation of v? is it "vee" with a f-type mouth placement or a "wee" or "wi" like the game console?