
Pertinent versus relevant- what's the usage difference
Dec 4, 2014 · According to various dictionaries, relevant means having a bearing on the matter at hand. Pertinent means “relevant to the matter at hand. Similarly, impertinent can be irrelevant. What...
word choice - "Relevant to" vs. "relevant for" - English Language ...
Feb 29, 2012 · Is there a rule to decide which is better: relevant to or relevant for? One is accusative and one dative but that doesn't really help me.
Can someone explain when to use "relevance" and when "relevancy"?
Feb 25, 2015 · Relevance is the more common form, according to grammarist.com: Relevance vs. relevancy: There is no difference between relevance and relevancy. Though the latter is the older …
Is there a semantic difference between relevance and pertinence?
Jan 8, 2011 · The dictionary defines relevant as being Closely connected or appropriate to the matter at hand whilst pertinent is defined as Relevant or applicable to a particular matter. Both of these
How relevant is the experiential use of the present perfect to the ...
Nov 19, 2016 · The book lists such uses of the present perfect as continuative (leading up from the past to the present - thus still somewhat relevant), of the recent past (recent - thus relevant), of result …
Relevantness synonym - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
What need to use a word with a meaning of relevantness. Noun from the word relevant. I know that relevantness is not good. What do you suggest to use?
"Irrelevant for" vs. "irrelevant to" - English Language & Usage Stack ...
Jun 23, 2012 · I would use "for" when there is intentionality, something depends on this thing being relevant to the issue in question. For example, "Here the specific conditions are irrelevant for the kind …
expressions - "Related work" or "related works" - English Language ...
What is the context? If the heading refers to things you produced in the same or relevant subject area, then work is uncountable, and the heading should be Related Work. If the heading refers to your …
grammaticality - Which is correct: "the below information" or "the ...
15 Merriam-Webster lists a relevant definition: below (adjective): written or discussed lower on the same page or on a following page Given this, there is nothing wrong with “the below information”.
adjectives - Should I use " related" or "-related" - English Language ...
What is the correct use of the term "related?" For example, should I use it like computer related, or is it more proper to use computer-related (where the word "computer" is just part of my examp...