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truthlessness    
n. 不诚实;不可靠



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  • Sorry for creating extra work for you | WordReference Forums
    Hi there, everyone: I was wondering if there's a polite formula in French for saying, "Sorry for causing you the extra trouble," or "I'm sorry for creating extra work for you " Thanks!
  • work more closely vs work closer (together) - WordReference Forums
    To "work closely with" someone means to work in a cooperative and collaborative way, with each supporting the effort of the other To "work closer together" refers strictly to the physical distance between workers
  • Work In On At With - WordReference Forums
    Work for (the name of the company) Work with (somebody, a group of people) Work at (the name of the company) but using 'at' sounds better to my ear Work in (a bank, an office, a warehouse) best when talking about the setting or type of location--but you may also use at, which sounds best ie I work at in an investment bank
  • Theres still a lot of work to do or to be done?
    Context: There is a lot of work still to be done to deliver these technologies in areas such as healthcare, but the groundwork is being prepared and we must be careful not to get locked in to pathways that are established for technological or purely economic reasons <from The age of the driverless bus is coming – and we can't let developers
  • The work gets more expensive the more that publishers do it.
    a The work gets more expensive the more publishers do it (deleting "that") b The more publishers do the work, the more expensive it gets c The more work publishers do, the more expensive it gets d The more the work that publishers do, the more expensive it gets What do you think of each of my rewrites above?
  • quicklier or more quickly? - WordReference Forums
    Yes, both "more dirty" and "dirtier" are acceptable, though "dirtier" is more natural sounding "Quicklier" is never used Although nzfauna prefers "quicker" to "more quickly," in North America these are not interchangeable; quicker cannot be an adverb These are correct: Adjective: A cat is quicker than a mouse
  • An adjective that means more than expected - WordReference Forums
    There have been lots of suggestions here, but to my mind the only one that really meets your requirements as stated at the outset is "exceptional", and even then there are alternative interpretations which mean something other than "more than expected", so the use of that term is a little ambiguous without further explanation
  • or something is worth more - WordReference Forums
    From " A picture is worth more than thousand words ", I understand that 'worth " is an adjective Then, why don't we say A picture is more worth than thousand words ? ( Just like we say person1 is more pretty than person 2 instead of person 1 is pretty more than person2) I am trying to make a sentence comparing 2 things For example,
  • much more work than or much work more than - WordReference Forums
    He's given me much work, more than I can handle Or you can change the word order: He's given me work much more than I can handle = He's given me work (the amount of which is) much more than I can handle (Though, I'm not sure if with a comma it'd be better)
  • I might work I might be working - WordReference Forums
    "I will work more this week, so I can get ahead of schedule for the week after " But if they think the extra work is a continuing process, or are focused on the process of the greater work rather than its existence as a time-limited phenomenon, they'll lean toward present continuous





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