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- Are rescind and resend homophones? - English Language Usage Stack . . .
Rescind and resend are homophones and easily confused words The following sentence uses both words correctly: Cilla was beside herself with anxiety: had Tyler rescinded his interest taking her to
- Are “rescind”, “repeal”, and “annul” perfect synonyms?
Lastly: rescind (verb) revoke, cancel, or repeal (a law, order, or agreement) : the government eventually rescinded the directive I'd be inclined to avoid rescind when repeal would work well (Mitt Romney pledged to repeal Obamacare, not rescind it), but rescind can be a good word to use when repeal or annul seem to be the wrong word
- descriptive grammar - does an issued a threat become rescinded . . .
does an "issued" a threat become "rescinded revoked" when acted upon? Ask Question Asked 5 years, 9 months ago Modified 5 years, 9 months ago
- Is rescindication a word? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
Please, laws are rescinded, not admissions to colleges Yes, you are off the track, in the weeds rescinding is not present tense only It is also a noun
- What word describes keeping something for purposes of reference, and . . .
Context: At a Town council meeting, one policy was rescinded, and a new policy was presented One councillor requested that a record be kept of the old policy for reference so the new policy could be better understood
- meaning - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
I was sending a message to one of our developers internally referring to an element on a page querying whether it was needed or would be used but I paused when I realised that I wasn't entirely sure
- How and when did American spelling supersede British spelling in the US . . .
Considering that Webster published his first dictionary in 1806, is there a recognised tipping point (year, decade, etc ) that marked the move from traditional British spelling to Webster's America
- What is the right word for eliminating a law? [closed]
Abolish is likely the best choice here, because, as you say, the law of gravity was never passed by parliamentary vote Both rescind, revoke, and repeal are used to describe getting rid of a law, but they all imply that the law is actually written into the books, which the law of gravity isn’t Abolish is broader and can be used for any kind of system that’s gotten rid of
- Synonyms for “you’ve got a point” - English Language Usage . . .
During a discussion, one can say Granted as an alternative to "You've got a point " It means that you grant this item of the discussion For example, Person A: This law has never been enforced Person B: Granted But do you think it should have been rescinded? Please see definition 3b of grant (v) b: to assume to be true granting that you are correct Source, M-W
- word choice - One of my friends vs. one of my friend - English . . .
Which of the following is correct? Yesterday, I met one of my friends Yesterday, I met one of my friend
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