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  1. as required vs if required - WordReference Forums

    May 17, 2007 · "as required" means that the item/requirement in quesion is already necessary. For instance: "As required by club rules, all members must keep dogs on leads" - the rule already exists …

  2. A minimum of 3 people is required...? | WordReference Forums

    Oct 31, 2009 · Hello, In my gym, there is a sign on the wall stating: " A minimum of 3 people is required for a class to begin ". To me, "a minimum of 3 people are required" would sound better, people being …

  3. requirements on/to/for? - WordReference Forums

    Mar 17, 2012 · Hello!:) Would you please state which preposition suits the best? The government has established higher requirements to/on/for certain products. Thank you in advance!

  4. elective course or optional course | WordReference Forums

    Jan 8, 2017 · While required courses (sometimes called "core courses" or "general education courses") are deemed essential for an academic degree, elective courses tend to be more specialized. Elective …

  5. WordReference Forums

    Apr 6, 2026 · Active forums about languages and translation

  6. necessarily required or compulsory | WordReference Forums

    Nov 20, 2015 · Are you asking about necessarily required vs. compulsory? The reason I ask is that you ask about "the underlined part," but actually, there is no underlined part. Assuming that I have …

  7. English Only - WordReference Forums

    Apr 9, 2005 · Discussions in English about the English language. This is not a translation forum.

  8. FR: à, au / dans un/le magasin - préposition - WordReference Forums

    Oct 13, 2020 · I do my shopping at neighbourhood shops And the required translation: Je fais mes achats dans les magasins de quartier The English sounds wrong to me, I would say “shop in local …

  9. attendance to or attendance at - WordReference Forums

    Nov 15, 2019 · If my attendance at the meeting is required, I will of course attend (= I will come / go to the meeting / be at the meeting) Note that to attend to something (phrasal verb) has a different …

  10. Required details / Details required | WordReference Forums

    Aug 23, 2006 · 'Required' could be considered a predicate adjective of 'details.' The confusion is that the verb has been omitted. It has been shortened from 'Details are required.' I'm not sure if this applies to …