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What's the difference in meaning and usage between 'post' and 'posting'
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 to allow many peop...
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terminology - Transmit vs Submit in relation to posting to online ...
Do they "Transmit", "Submit", or "Post" the content to the website? Which of these three terms is the most appropriate to specify in TOS to be proper English terminology when it comes to users posting content to any website. If you believe some other terms might me more appropriate please name them as well.
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"Get around to" + infinitive/gerund? - English Language Learners Stack ...
Posting on Instagram is fun. posting= subject, gerund noun. on Instagram= prepositional phrase is, linking verb fun=predicate (adjective) I finally got around to my homework. [okay, also because homework is a noun].
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Post to/for_the difference? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
If you post some letters for someone, you're saving them the trouble of posting those letters themselves (letters which they probably wrote themselves; certainly, letters which they are responsible for posting). If you post letters to someone, you hope they will eventually be delivered to that person.
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infinitive vs gerund - "remember to do" vs. "remember doing" - English ...
Closed 8 years ago. What is the difference between in the meaning of these two sentences: I will remember to post the letter. I will remember posting the letter. How can we know where to use gerund or infinitive? Are there any specific verbs that can be used particularly for gerund and infinitive separately?
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'She insisted me to post this one.' or 'She insisted on posting this one.'
"She insisted on posting this one" would imply that she is posting it no matter what your opinion is. If she is trying to convince you to do it, the correct phrasing would be, "She insisted that I post this one." Some Americans would say "She insisted on me posting this one", but that's not quite grammatical.
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Is there any difference between "post under" and "post with"?
I think that the history of usage may be that to "post under" comes from the term to "write under" a name - because the author's name would be on the cover, and their writing on the pages underneath the cover - it is a visualisation of posting content physically/spatially under the author's name. "Post with" is more abstract - indicating an association of the name with the content being posted ...
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prepositions - "posted to", "posted at", "posted on" - English Language ...
Which preposition should we use with posted? A new question is posted to Stack Overflow every 12 seconds. A new question is posted at Stack Overflow every 12 seconds. A new question is pos...
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"this reminds me of", "this reminded me of", "this made me think of ...
Someone asked a question on a forum and my reply to that question started with: Your question reminded me of a similar thread on this forum. Before posting this I was debating between reminds and
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Q1 2024 but 1H 2024. Why? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
To my knowledge: one typically writes Q1 2024 and not 1Q 2024 to designate the first quarter of 2024 (example). one typically writes 1H 2024 and not H1 2024 to designate the first half of 2024 (ex...