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  1. Découvrez THE 1, le nouveau sac iconique rock et intemporel de IKKS. Le nouveau sac THE 1 signé IKKS, est disponible dès maintenant sur ikks.com et en boutique

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  1. 19 avr. 2012 · 31. One-to-one is used when you talk about transfer or communications. You may use one-to-one when you can identify a source and a destination. For eg., a one-to-one email is one sent from a single person to another, i.e., no ccs or bccs. In maths, a one-to-one mapping maps one element of a set to a unique element in a target set.

  2. 1 févr. 2015 · It would come much more naturally to a native speaker to say not "That man is a 50-year-old" [note also the hyphenation here] but "That is a 50-year-old man"; similarly, not "That kid is a one-and-a-half-year-old today" [a construction I have never heard anyone use when referring to half years as part of someone's age], but "That is a one-and-a-half-year-old kid" (omitting the 'today'), or ...

  3. 21 juil. 2017 · 1) In technical writing, numerals should always be used. The company hired 4 interns, but the fifth 1 left. Patch management is 1 of the best ways... The client should create a 1-way trust. 2) When using it as a pronoun or as an unspecified measure, "one" should be used. One of the things to consider. The assessment met one common standard.

  4. 1 juil. 2012 · J.R.: Yes, I didn't want to clog up the answer itself with that level of detail, but when the word "the" is part of the "the one side/hand" juxtaposed with "the other side/hand", most of the instances with "hand" are exactly OP's context, but very few of the (far less common anyway) instances of "side" are actually for that "weighing up of alternatives" sense.

  5. 1. AS OF would mean "at a certain time onward". AS AT would mean "at a precise time of event". AS FROM would mean "at a certain time onward" just like AS OF, but I still don't quite get it. That leads me to go back and use SINCE. Much simpler and people use it in writings and speeches.

  6. 18 oct. 2012 · Both prepositions can be used to specify location, as well as others. "I am in China. I am at the Great Wall. Tomorrow I will be on the island." I'm not aware of any one simple rule that will always lead you to the "correct" preposition (although Gulliver's guideline below is a good generality), and sometimes they can be used interchangeably. –

  7. I would use "with" in such a sentence. "By" only seems reasonable in passive, although "with" sounds like it would there work too: That component was replaced by this one. That component was replaced with this one. In my native language, the equivalent of "replace by" can only be used in passive, and even then it's a bit weird unless a person ...

  8. 12 déc. 2015 · 1. One of the former students. "One of" refers to a group. The group that follows is plural. "Students" is plural of "student." Consider the statement, "one of the team." A team is a group. It can be referred to as singular or plural, depending on the context. In this case, the sentence refers to a larger entity which "one" is part of.

  9. @Mr. Hyde One can sometimes shift the preposition in writing or in speech, yes: "the party which he spoke at was" etc.. Bear in mind, though, that in non-literary writing, the preposition would not be shifted. Which without in is not part of this question. The point here is about the prepositioins. –

  10. For me, this approach has quite a few advantages. First of all, it is more personal than simply "Greetings" or "Hi all". Secondly, if one of those people is the main recipient and the other is CC, or if one of them has a higher rank (say, he is the boss of the other), I can reflect that in my address by mentioning him first. Lastly, this ...

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