About 50 results
Open links in new tab
  1. How it is different or How is it different? - WordReference Forums

    Apr 28, 2012 · Which one of the following is correct in the following context? Why Islamabad and How it is different? Why Islamabad and How is it different? P.S. Islamabad is the capital city of Pakistan. …

  2. people with/from/of different backgrounds - WordReference Forums

    Nov 27, 2016 · There are some discussions here: Of/with/from different background. But it is not exactly what I am looking for. I am wondering which of the following is correct: (a) I've been working with …

  3. kind of food or kinds of foods?? | WordReference Forums

    Jul 23, 2008 · When do you use kind of and kinds of??? Are there any special rules? For example, There are many kinds of foods I like or There are many kinds of food??????????

  4. fuck you / fuck off | WordReference Forums

    Aug 25, 2006 · Topic phrases: fuck you / fuck off Added by Cagey, moderator Sorry for this stupid question but what's the difference between these 2 expressions?

  5. On different days or in different days? - WordReference Forums

    Jul 16, 2021 · It was "They had to change TV channels on different days at different times". I read "in different days" could be correct too, I don't know. Thank you in advance for your help too.

  6. العربية (Arabic) - WordReference Forums

    Sep 23, 2005 · Questions about Arabic, or translations between Arabic and any other language.

  7. What is the relationship between Khmer, Thai, and Viet languages

    Oct 26, 2007 · Thai and Lao belong to a completely different language family, viz. Tai-Kadai. This kind of classification makes an abstraction of the influence of other languages over the centuries, possible …

  8. Here you are / Here you go / There you are / There you go

    Oct 26, 2006 · There are some contexts where "here/there you are" and "here/there you go" are quite different. But when said while handing something to someone else, they are interchangeable, right?

  9. catch a cold or catch cold? - WordReference Forums

    Nov 16, 2007 · The expressions mean something different: To catch a cold is to catch the disease. To catch cold, or to take cold is to stay out too long in cold weather and spend a long time shivering …

  10. people of/with/from different ages/cultures/backgrounds/occupations

    Feb 12, 2020 #1 Hello, 1. I like to work with people of/with different ages. 2. I like to work with people of /from different cultures. 3. I like to work with people of/with/from different backgrounds. 4. I like to …