About 29 results
Open links in new tab
  1. word choice - copy/pasting or copying/pasting? - English Language ...

    Should we write: I am copy/pasting the text Or: I am copying/pasting the text ?

  2. word usage - English Language Learners Stack Exchange

    As far as I understand copy-and-paste is used to mean the operation of copying, and pasting. If somebody did that, can I say (for example) the following? She copied-and-pasted what I wrote on my ...

  3. word choice - English Language Learners Stack Exchange

    Nov 12, 2021 · Both post and posting are the same according to Cambridge Dictionary (Android version). Both have the same meaning i.e. an electronic message that you send to a website in order …

  4. Do we have this structure "to glue something into something"?

    Feb 6, 2025 · Both glued in and glued into are fine; glued to is not clear on how the pasting was done. Two lists of publications with the two possible usages are shown below:

  5. What's the meaning of "skirt off into a corner"?

    Jul 11, 2023 · rdrg109, Please type out the entire text you wish to quote rather than pasting an image. People who use screen readers cannot read the text in an image. Also, people searching for terms in …

  6. Is there any difference between 'At this point' and 'To this point'?

    Feb 1, 2023 · No, they are not: At this point in the conversation, I would like to tell that [blah blah blah]. At this point in our lives, etc. In response to that point you made about purple roses, I'd like to say …

  7. What does "gained little traction" mean? - English Language Learners ...

    Apr 29, 2021 · There are too many definitions on Merriam so that I would like to refrain from copying and pasting all here. I assume "gain little traction" means "gain almost no support", am I correct?

  8. Is it grammatically correct to say "ON the picture?"

    When describing the people or things which appear in a picture, we use "in". If you were to use the phrase "on the picture", it would most likely be to describe something that was not part of the picture …

  9. Difference between "trust", "trust in", and "trust on"

    Mar 28, 2016 · According to LDOCE, Trust in is a phrasal verb which is formal and means to believe in someone or something as in We trust in God. Trust means to believe that someone is honest or will …

  10. "to use" vs "in using" vs "in usage" - English Language Learners Stack ...

    Italian people have some difficulties in usage of the word "interchange" and the phrase "each other". When I wrote that sentence some doubts arose to my mind in reference to the highlighted words "in