I often see people use the word 'faculty' to refer to a faculty member 2, if it is, should i use 'whether' or 'if' I have seen this used by americans also
Are 'faculty' and 'faculty member' both mean the same? Is the question correctly phrased Hello, my dear word nerd fellows
What's the most common term to refer to someone whom one works with at a lab, say, having the same capacity instead of working as one's assistant Is it a labmate, or simply a lab partner Thanks in advance for your help! I'm filling the forms required to get a visa to go on vacation to the usa
There's a question that reads who is paying for your trip (that would be my dad) relationship with this person Would this be child, or parent Then there's another question about who i'm going with (both my mom.
Fanoos banke jiski hifazat hava kare, woh shama kya bujhe jise roshan khuda kare He is family which means he is a family member, right? in this case,is “family” an adjective? i looked up the dictionary, found “family” as an adjective Thank you so much! yes, you’ve hit the nail on the head In this case, ‘family’ is indeed an adjective (only colloquially), describing him ‘as being a family member’.
Before was was was, was was is Before was is was, was was is Which one do you think makes more sense I think the second, although the first gets more hits on google, because was now comes as was, so the tense should be present.
I can’t give you a straightforward answer or even a rule to follow Nouns such as government, committee, group, team, department, family and company can be used to refer both to a whole group as a singular entity and to the members of the group So there is sometimes a case for using a plural verb rather than a singular verb, but this is. I guess the address of every member or the addresses of all the members would be correct in the following sentence
Yes, and in fact the address of every member sounds more correct to me than the original. Could some member/s confirm whether/if i am correct