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  1. 1 janv. 2014 · These powers included: women, cars, ships, the Atlantic ocean and even (in one case) the lock on someone's locker. Women and men equally used "she" in reference to these things. The other pronoun "he" referred to men, animals and God. I do not recall the pronoun "it" being used for much, but it probably referred to small objects of little ...

  2. 29 juil. 2023 · 1. Literally, a "she wolf" simply means a female wolf. In a fantasy story it can refer to a female werewolf. Figuratively, it can mean a woman who the writer sees as being LIKE a wolf, that is, fierce and aggressive. Or "predatory". "Predatory" means a creature that tracks down and kills other creatures. Among wild animals, normally we'd expect ...

  3. 15 août 2013 · 1. The answer depends completely on the context. In general non-fiction, technical, academic, and business writing, using the pronoun "she" with a country is not appropriate. Use only "it" as a pronoun for things. In creative writing, including fiction, literary criticism, poetry, and essays (political opinion), the use of a feminine pronoun ...

  4. 2 nov. 2021 · References to Ashe peaked around 1990, but references to Hollis peaked in the mid 30s to mid 50s, so almost certainly that would imply Hollis's writing are more dated than Ashe's, since it looks pretty obvious that Hollis was much older (by inference from their frequency of mentions; I haven't bothered explicitly checking that). –

  5. 28 nov. 2023 · I'm reading a book "pretty pretty boys" from Gregory Ashe. There is a word I can't understand "tap off". I give you the context :"The rest of the day had passed in a blur of work: tapping off the garage door, examining the property for any physical evidence ...". Is this maybe a word from the vocabularies's police. The book is a novel crime. Thanks

  6. 16 juin 2020 · 3. "the" is almost always used with "same". I think this sentence can be rephrased in a better way as follows: Additionally, records have shown that increasing the data size to 1MB and keeping the access latency reduces the throughput the same as a small data set (does). Share.

  7. The sentence #1 is grammatical. The auxiliary verbs has and have are used with the past particple (the third form) of a verb to form a sentence in the present perfect. The three forms of the verb come are come, came, and come. So only the first sentence with the past participle "come" is OK. No. "Come" is the PAST participle, which is why it is ...

  8. 28 déc. 2018 · Neither of those is really correct for what you're trying to say. "She insisted on posting this one" would imply that she is posting it no matter what your opinion is.

  9. I admit. The articles are the most difficult things I find in this language but I'm learning and I'm better than before! I've been reading about the articles in several authentic books and have a

  10. 22 juil. 2019 · 2. In these sorts of contexts, "as well as" means 'in addition to" or "besides". A possible source of confusion is that "as well as" can also mean "with at least a great a degree of skill or ability". Thus "I can play the violin as well as the viola" probably means simply "I play both instruments" but may mean "I play them with equal skill".

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