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Canada-0-FloatsService Κατάλογοι Εταιρεία
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Εταιρικά Νέα :
- orthography - noone, no one or no-one? - English Language Usage . . .
What is the correct form? Does context play a role? Are there noticeable trends towards the awkward "noone" or is it just a by-product of careless orthography on the Internet?
- hyphenation - Why hyphenate no one: no-one? - English Language Usage . . .
So, really it's a matter of preference "no one" is more formally correct, but since there's a valid argument to use "no-one" when you mean "nobody" and "no one" when you mean "no single" (as detailed above), then I don't think you could say that "no-one" is definitely wrong Language evolves and changes all the time, depending on people's needs
- no one vs no one else - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
Can anyone please tell me if I should use no one or no one else in the following sentence? Here is the example: John is a very good friend of mine No one (else) likes me more than he does I thin
- She or her following no one but?
Which pronoun is correct in the following sentence? No one but her she ever made a perfect score on the test The answer according to the book is "her", but it is getting on my nerves I tried sol
- american english - No one knows or no one know? - English Language . . .
0 No one knows the answer This is correct No one know the answer This is incorrect "No one" is singular, just like "one" and "someone", so the plural verb "know" is incompatible There is nobody answering the question The grammar of this one is correct, but it has a different meaning
- meaning - What is it called when something appears so obvious, no one . . .
0 What is it called when something appears so obvious, no one expects it? Maybe "well, duh," would work? Jack pulled a vodka bottle out of his knapsack and started taking slugs from it at lunch I thought it was water and him trying to be funny But when he got the giggles during the math quiz in Period 5, well, duh, I guess it was vodka after all
- What is the correct abbreviation for the word numbers?
But no is surely the abbreviation for "number" and nos is the abbreviation for "numbers" in the Oxford Instructions The "do not take a final 's' in the plural" only applies to lb, mm, kg, and so forth, and is irrelevant to this question
- Meaning of makes no sense - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
Are you asking what "makes no sense" means? Or are you asking which of the two examples you provided is a better alternative to "makes no sense"?
- Origin of going number 1 or number 2 in the bathroom
I was wondering about the origin of using the terms "number one" and "number two" for going to the bathroom (for those unaware, number one is urinating, number two is defecating, at least in the US)
- Does but one mean only one or except one? [duplicate]
So "but one" means "only one", but "all but one" means "all except one"? And why did you but "be" in parentheses? Does the former idiom only work with "be", or does it work with other verbs as well?
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