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unpatient查看 unpatient 在百度字典中的解释百度英翻中〔查看〕
unpatient查看 unpatient 在Google字典中的解释Google英翻中〔查看〕
unpatient查看 unpatient 在Yahoo字典中的解释Yahoo英翻中〔查看〕





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  • terminology - Whats the definition of unpatient? - English Language . . .
    'Unpatient' is apparently an obsolete form of 'impatient', but given the medical field and reference to neologisms, I'm guessing that isn't the meaning you are after I think this is a jargon question rather than english usage The website you link seeks to separate historic notions of paternalism and suffering associated with 'patient' from an updated model of an informed and empowered
  • Co-Founder, Co-founder, or cofounder? - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    Co-founder Once hyphenated, the word is a single word, so only needs a capital at the beginning of the entire word If you write Co Founder (which isn't really a word) then you'd capitalize both co-founder works in a sentence when it's not part of someone's title So: Sentence: Elizabeth is the co-founder of the company Title: Elizabeth Jones, Co-founder [IMHO and American experience prior
  • Vendor vs. vender in Standard American English
    The spelling vendor is the standard spelling The New Yorker, as part of its bizarre house style, uses the spelling vender No one else does, besides those trying to emulate The New Yorker’s style Of the 45 examples in COCA, only 17 were actual uses of the spelling vender outside of The New Yorker (compared with over 2000 examples of vendor, a ratio of over 100 to 1) Two were proper names
  • Focussed or focused? Rules for doubling the last consonant when . . .
    The rules are much more complicated, and I don't think it's a good idea to post them all here Re: doubling of the final consonant in an unstressed syllable Pam Peters (in "The Cambridge Guide to English Usage") argues that when the final syllable is identical with a monosyllabic word, the final consonant is also doubled in British English: eavesdropped, kidnapped, formatted, worshipped
  • phrase requests - A word to describe not caring (socially and . . .
    What is the word to describe someone who does not care about other people socially and publicly, that is a word or phrase which could describe behaviors such as littering, cutting in a line, talkin
  • What is the plural of sir? [closed] - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    Please include the research you’ve done, or consider if your question suits our English Language Learners site better Questions that can be answered using commonly-available references are off-topic
  • abbreviations - Punctuation with US measurements - English Language . . .
    What kind of work are you writing— scientific, journalistic, literary? In scholarly and industrial use, periods tend to be omitted altogether, except some style guides prefer in for inches to avoid confusion with the word in
  • The meaning of This is it - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    This is an unhelpful answer What is correct is irrelevant, and what is relevant is not correct The question is clearly not about the general meaning of "This is it", where "it" identifies something already established It is talking about the idiom "This is it", meaning "We have arrived at the point we expected awaited feared" There's nothing about "life itself" in it
  • First floor vs ground floor, usage origin - English Language Usage . . .
    Ground floor – First floor: In British English, the floor of a building which is level with the ground is called the ground floor The floor above it is called the first floor, the floor above





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