members members members area | WordReference Forums One is not necessarily correct over the others - member's area = an area of a member, belonging to a member - members' area = an area of members, belonging to more than one member - members area = an area for members That is exactly the problem I have been having so far
Abreviação da palavra número (#, nº) | WordReference Forums Hi, In which way can I abbreviate número without using nº? The font I use doesn't have the º character so I want to know if I can replace it with "no " or "num" instead Thanks in advance!
member vs fellow - WordReference Forums Hi all, :confused: "XXX is Royal Academician (i e member of the Royal Academy, according to Wikipedia) and a fellow of the Royal Society of Arts" We are talking about the London Royal Academy and Royal Society of Arts, two truly British Institutions I would like to properly understand the
WordReference Forums This forum is closed to new threads Recursos para usuarios de los foros español inglés Resources for members of the Spanish English forums
Membership in membership to | WordReference Forums Hi! I have a doubt: i want to say in my cv that i've been part of several associations which of the two expressions should i use? Membership in various associations or Membership to various associations? Any tip is welcomed! Thanks!
EN: Good luck with on for in at - WordReference Forums Abbrevs Senior Member Virginia-- USA English- America Jun 11, 2009 #4 Usually, you would say "with" Good luck Best of luck with your future endeavors work etc But on works well most of the time, too Good However, the two are not interchangeable, unfortunately I don't think there's a rule to know when to use which Both "with" and "on" work
Difference in pronunciation between: a, á, ã, â and à Could I get a few people to explain the difference in pronunciation between a, á, ã, â and à in Portuguese using English comparisons (if possible)? I can't seem to find a thread or other Web site that addresses them each clearly Thanks!
génération des matures - WordReference Forums This is used to describe a generation in opposition to the baby boomers Baby boomer are obviously already a "mature" generation, so could it mean something like "older generation"? Les baby-boomers sont perçus comme les plus généreux, mais en réalité, la génération des matures est celle qui