
What's the difference in 'personalize' and 'personalise'?
Have you looked either personalize or personalise up in a dictionary? What did it say? If you're still confused after looking them both up and writing what you're still confused about, flag the question …
Usage of "Staying online" - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Jul 27, 2018 · I know that "online" means a person is reachable over the Internet. Can I say "staying online" while speaking about phone calls? Example: Thanks for staying online. (Thanks for not …
word usage - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Oct 3, 2023 · Purely a personal perspective, but I'm inclined to see inconsistencies in such contexts as referring to elements within the report which conflict with other elements in the report, whereas …
word usage - Are "Where did you put it?" and "Where did you leave it ...
Mar 13, 2024 · Your "study" just requires looking up to put and to leave in a dictionary, so I don't understand what you're asking. Yes, you have correctly understood the dictionary definitions as they …
Anyone vs everyone - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Mar 5, 2024 · Can someone help explain if "anyone" or "everyone" should be used in the following sentence? We enable ____ to do anything. Though English is my second …
grammar - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
May 11, 2024 · Could someone explain to me the differences between the following sentences? I'm going to a party tomorrow vs I'm going to go to a party tomorrow.
What is the difference between "split the money" and "go dutch"?
Oct 25, 2020 · I get the impression that split the bill is slowly overtaking go dutch as the usual phrase but I have no solid evidence either way.
word usage - "Affect" / "Impact" / "Influence" - English Language ...
Nov 17, 2021 · The consequences of the economic downturn will certainly affect people's lives in every society. This version has the least nuance. It just means what it means: the consequences will have …
formality - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Mar 2, 2021 · Can you clarify your question - is it (a) whether using singular "they" to refer to a nonbinary person is accepted in formal English or (b) whether using singular "they" indiscriminately, including …
"By the river" vs "at the river." - English Language Learners Stack ...
Feb 24, 2021 · Which one is more common? Example sentence: The firework festival was held at/by the river. Or are they equally correct?