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  2. 8-in-1 sentence - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/258653

    This works for pretty much any sentence, provided you limit it to meaningful words; it's called Contrastive Stress and it implicitly compares whatever's stressed with its opposite, in context. No. 4 doesn't work because the did is an automatic auxiliary, required by negation but having no individual meaning, which therefore has no opposite to ...

  3. What, exactly, is the point of beginning a sentence with...

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/122122/what-exactly-is-the-point-of...

    I explained this in a comment and got 3 negative votes! Well, I guess this is why we need more sites like this one because the basic sentence is being forgotten and is being reborn as a sentence fragment. This also raises that issue of pausing when speaking. Commas can separate clauses (etc). You should pause between clauses.

  4. yet2 has a totally different meaning. It is a conjunction (or better a sentence introduction) introducing a sentence that expresses an idea contrary to the statement in the preceding sentence. 2 A waiter of a small Italian restaurant about his job: The pay isn't good. Yet it is a job. This yet2 has the meaning of "but", but the contrast is ...

  5. writing style - using the word "meaning" in a sentence to explain...

    english.stackexchange.com/.../using-the-word-meaning-in-a-sentence-to-explain

    I have the following sentence: This process is circuitous, meaning, the responsibility returns to the Originator user after all is approved. A few questions: I know this would be a fully understood sentence in speech, but is it proper to write like this in a User Guide, for example? Is the punctuation correct ?

  6. Please explain the meaning of this sentence [closed]

    english.stackexchange.com/.../491112/please-explain-the-meaning-of-this-sentence

    Here's how I'd rewrite that sentence into simpler sentences: I hope you've been persuaded that these ideas are worth learning. They require a good amount of intellectual struggle – you might have to think a lot to understand them. However, they are profound and valuable enough to outweigh that intellectual struggle.

  7. punctuation - What is "/ /" used for in a sentence? - English...

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/387383

    The "sed" command is commonly found in Unix, and is downloadable for Windows. Here is an example: echo I like blue apples | sed s/blue/red/. (That command will say "I like red apples". The part between the first couple of slashes gets replaced by the part between the next couple of slashes.)

  8. i.e. is an abbreviation for the Latin "id est", meaning "that is" (or more loosely, "in other words"). Its English usage follows precisely as such. The abbreviation is simply used to signal that the following phrase is another way of expressing the preceding phrase. (Note: i.e. is often misused to indicate an example; this is incorrect.

  9. When does a comma change the meaning of a sentence?

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/50111

    Both 1) and 2) have the same meaning b). However, the use of comma before and is now discouraged by some and flagged by some software. For the first meaning, you would say "I had a discussion with my friend, a programmer" or better still, "I had a discussion with a programmer friend".

  10. 10. " Of which " is part of a relative clause. " Which " is the relative pronoun and " of " is a preposition placed at the beginning of the relative clause, instead of at the end. A few examples of this construction are: She discovered so many spiders, of which she was most afraid.

  11. When is it necessary to use "have had"?

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/4870

    111. "Have had" is using the verb have in the present perfect tense. Consider the present tense sentence: I have a lot of homework. This means that I have a lot of homework now. On the other hand, we use the present perfect tense to describe an event from the past that has some connection to the present. Compare the following two sentences: I ...