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  2. "5 min" or "5 mins"? | Learn English - Preply

    preply.com/en/question/5-min-or-5-mins-41325

    5 mins" would be appropriate unless you are expressing it as an adjective then use the singular form, as in a five minute break or the ten minute mark. However, in scientific writing, the abbreviation for the units is always in the singular form – 5min, 5km, 5kg. It might therefore not be considered wrong to use singular forms of ...

  3. punctuation - “5-min” video vs “5 min” video vs “5min” video -...

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/209042/5-min-video-vs-5-min-video-vs-5min...

    Only the hyphen is correct. The two (or more) words combined form a compound adjective to describe one aspect of the video. Note the singular form of the full word (five-minute video - not five minutes video) despite the plural number: this is the clue a hyphen is needed, although the rule applies of all compound adjectives. Consider: 14-year ...

  4. Which is correct use of the apostophe in minutes?

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/280155

    Hello, Jim. I'm happier with 'Just a minute's walk away is ....' than 'Just a minute walk away is ....' And there are plenty of examples to be found on the internet (admittedly not only for the Saxon genitive form I prefer here, but also for the singular-form (minute) attributive usage). And 'He is three foot/feet high' are both commonly used.

  5. "5 min after" vs. "at 5 min after" - English Language & Usage...

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/240446

    But that does not mean that omitting "at" is invalid for specific points in time, since that depends on the type of time specification. "5 min after X" is already specific enough and leaves no doubt that it means "exactly 5 min after X". Likewise for phrases like "the day after" or "the week before". That said, there is a tendency to say "at 5 ...

  6. in 5 minutes, after 5minutes [duplicate] - English Language &...

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/231048/in-5-minutes-after-5minutes

    I'm going to close the door in five minutes on the dot [i.e., in exactly five minutes], so you'd better get in here before five minutes are up. [In other words, at five minutes plus one second, the door is already closed.] I'm going to close the door after five minutes [have elapsed], so I encourage you to be on time.

  7. I am 5-minute late? - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/488456

    4. and 5. are obviously apologies rather than statements. 'I'm running five minutes late' means that you have not yet arrived at your destination but are five minutes behind where you would need to be to make it on time. Context*: **a. heads-up that I'm going to be late (I'm 5 minutes late). b.

  8. What is the correct usage of hyphens with ranges (as in "a 5 to...

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/468956/what-is-the-correct-usage-of...

    The teacher told the students to take a 5- to 10-minute rest. But AP and Chicago notwithstanding, I have worked for some publishers whose house style calls for closing up the entire compound modifier with hyphens, as in option 3 in the posted question: The teacher told the students to take a 5-to-10-minute rest.

  9. The 14 Best Podcasts to Help You Learn English [2024] - Preply

    preply.com/en/blog/the-best-podcasts-to-help-you-learn-english

    6 Minute English fits into even the busiest schedules – no excuses! 6 Minute English is a news podcast produced every week and is aimed at intermediate speakers. Each episode comes with a list of vocabulary, a thought-provoking question, and a transcript so you can follow along in case you miss some words or phrases.

  10. 8 Fun Warm Up Activities For Online English Classes - Preply

    preply.com/en/blog/tut-res-warm-up-activities-for-online-classes

    So, what are some 5-minute warm up activities for your online classroom? In this guide you’ll find a range of fun, low-preparation warm up activities – for kids, teens and adult learners alike. 5-minute online warm up games for kids. Young learners can find switching to English more challenging than older learners.

  11. "Every minute" or "once a minute" is correct. There isn't a single word for this. RegDwight points out "minute by minute" and "on a minute-by-minute basis", but note that "on a minute-by-minute basis" means something different from "every minute" - "he updates his blog on a minute-by-minute basis" - he updates his blog very frequently, perhaps not actually every minute - as opposed to "he ...