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  1. 25 juil. 2007 · Hi, everyone!:) I would like to find another adjective for "patience" other than, like, enormous. I want to thanks people who have a good patience, a lot of patience, a kind patience. I need another adjective as good as or better than "enormous." Thanks for your kind patience!

  2. 11 janv. 2022 · English - England. Jan 11, 2022. #2. No. All we can really tell you is that the writer or speaker thought it appropriate to say it that way, and it’s perfectly understandable. But having patience for something is not a standard expression. Personally, I probably wouldn’t use it in quite that way. I might use any of these: I don't have the ...

  3. 14 mars 2014 · ShakespeareLass said: 1. My patience is wearing thin. This is a common idiom in American English. It implies that my once-thick "my patience" is becoming thinner and thinner, due to wear and tear on it. In other words, someone is doing things that use up my patience. There is no difference in meaning.

  4. 5 mai 2015 · "Thank you for your continuing understanding and patience." "Thank you for your continued understanding and patience." Which one is the correct use? What are the difference? I am trying to say thank you for always understanding me and I know you will keep understanding me in the future as...

  5. 21 août 2020 · Patient not mean sick or...? Patient (noun) - a person undergoing medical treatment. Patient (adjective) - Being willing to wait for something. hack3rcon said: If I want to use "patience" then I must add "have" ? Then it is OK? Yes.

  6. 11 oct. 2017 · Wisconsin. English - United States. Oct 11, 2017. #3. Anything can be made to sound rude by saying it in a particular tone of voice or putting it in a particular context. That said, I would not normally take "Thank you for your patience" as being anything other than polite. "Thank you for tolerating me" sounds odd and passive-aggressive.

  7. 29 août 2007 · Countable nouns are the nouns you can count, say two bowls of rice (a bowl), one loaf of bread (a loaf). And uncountable nouns are those you can't count, e.g. substances, qualities (water, heat, self-confidence, patience). All the English grammar guides I have seen claim that no indefinite article ("a/an") can be used with uncountable nouns ever.

  8. 11 mars 2008 · Senior Member. first you say: "I really appreciate your patience and your support not only in writing the letters" and so far so good! I really appreciate your patience and your support (first sentence) in being a professor and thesis advisor whose advice has been invaluable (the two sentences are not connected in my opinion).

  9. 8 mars 2007 · Thanks a lot, for your patience. WordReference.com Language Forums. Forums. Rules/Help/FAQ Help/FAQ. Members Current visitors. Interface Language. ...

  10. 4 sept. 2008 · Bonjour à tous sur le forum français. J'ai un réel blanc quant à l'accord dans la phrase suivante : c'est la femme dont je t'ai parlée ou parlée ? Je dirais : "C'est la femme dont je t'ai parlé", puisque le participe passé employé avec l'auxiliaire avoir ne s'accorde qu'avec le complément d'objet direct. Or il n'y en a pas dans cette ...

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