Web Search Results for "Science Sound"

informatics /computer science /information technology [+informatician ...
12 Nov 2024 at 8:15am
Oct 9, 2010. #27. panjandrum said: A 1967 definition from the OED: Informatics is the discipline of science which investigates the structure and properties (not specific content) of scientific information, as well as the regularities of scientific information activity, its theory, history, methodology and organization.

Onomatopoeia for howling - WordReference Forums
19 Nov 2024 at 8:35am
Mar 24, 2021. #17. Hello, Lilium - what an interesting question. In Shakespeare's "King Lear", right at the end of the play, Lear's daughter has been murdered and Lear comes on carrying her dead body, with several other characters in attendance. He says (and this is how it is printed): Howl, howl, howl, howl!

crying/cryin' (apostrophe to remove "g" in "ing" endings)
12 Nov 2024 at 7:20pm
Approximately 60% of English speakers pronounce gerund -ing (etymology 1) differently from participial -ing (etymology 2). In such cases, the gerund form is pronounced /??/, and the participial form is pronounced /?n/ or /i?n/. This actually reflects the older etymology of the two forms, as the participial form originally did not have a g ...

To who/whom am I speaking with? | WordReference Forums
19 Nov 2024 at 3:34am
English (England) Feb 18, 2005. #2. 1"To/with whom am I speaking" or. 2"who am I speaking to/with". Many people will tell you number 1 is the only correct option, in fact it is never said - and would sound odd. I would always say number 2 in all situations. I am not aware of any particular difference between to/with here - I would say "to" is ...

"it has been (a) long (time) (since)..." - variations
19 Nov 2024 at 4:32am
But, on the other hand, the sentences given below are also correct. 5. It has been a long time since I have lived in this city. 6. It has been a long time since I have had a car. In 5 and 6, the verbs imply continuity. 5 and 6 can be re-written as. 7. It has been a long time since I moved this city. 8.

laurea magistrale a ciclo unico | WordReference Forums
17 Nov 2024 at 8:55pm
In particular fields, namely Law, Pharmacy and Medicine, this system (commonly called "tre più due", i.e. 3+2) was not adopted and it is awarded a single 5 to 6-year master's degree, the Laurea magistrale a ciclo unico, which does not require a previous bachelor's degree for the admission. The old 4 to 5-year degree Laurea, which was the only ...

at the department or in the department | WordReference Forums
14 Nov 2024 at 6:57pm
English - England. Sep 13, 2012. #3. I would choose a different prepositon. I am pursuing my botany Master's degree with the Department of Plant and Soil Science at the University of... In my book, you are not 'in' the department unless you are a paid employee. D.

a graduate of/from the university of ... - WordReference Forums
18 Nov 2024 at 4:04am
To say you "graduated from" a college means you received an undergraduate degree from that college. It could be a 4-year BS or BA or a 2-year "Associate degree". In several professions, the undergraduate degree is just the "first step". You need a 4-year degree, plus one or more graduate degrees, to work as a doctor, lawyer, nurse, teacher, etc.

Three-and-twenty years old! - WordReference Forums
19 Nov 2024 at 2:09am
Sep 4, 2005. #2. Kräuter_Fee: Saying "three-and-twenty" is outdated English, but was perfectly correct in past centuries (don't nail be down on exactly when this way of counting died out). There is the famous English nursery rhyme that goes like this: Sing a song of sixpence, pocket full of rye. Four-and-twenty blackbirds baked in a pie...

had better VS. would better | WordReference Forums
15 Nov 2024 at 4:58am
This is the best (worst) example. It comes from a novel by G David Nordley called To Climb a Flat Mountain. Mr Nordley is an American Science Fiction writer and an physicist. b. Rather than prescribing a 1,600-calorie diet, Archer would better lead the students to find a balance of calories and activity that they can maintain...



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