enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Labeling or Labelling? - WordReference Forums

    forum.wordreference.com/threads/labeling-or-labelling.858400

    Hi, Which is the correct spelling for labeling/labelling? I am trying to say "Labelling laws" (normas de etiquetado) I am confused because I have seen it in both ways but don't know which is the correct one: one or two L ? Thanks!

  3. label and labeling | WordReference Forums

    forum.wordreference.com/threads/label-and-labeling.1805190

    The label is whatever is attached to the product to say what the product is and giving other information. Often it is a piece of paper glued to the product or its container, but it can have other forms as well. It might be on a hanging tag, for instance. The "labeling" is more general: It is whatever comes with the product and gives information ...

  4. Labelled vs. labeled - WordReference Forums

    forum.wordreference.com/threads/labelled-vs-labeled.1253433

    label /ˈleɪbl/. verb (labels, labelling, labelled; US labels, labeling, labeled) 1 attach a label to. 2 assign to a category, especially inaccurately. 3 Biology & Chemistry make (a substance, cell, etc.) identifiable using a label. It's pretty clear to me (and my spell-checker)

  5. Take n' Bake - WordReference Forums

    forum.wordreference.com/threads/take-n-bake.3242322

    Connecticut, USA. French-France. Oct 18, 2016. #2. Take 'n Bake typically refers to pizza sold uncooked to customers (so they can bake it at home). By extension, it could be used for any baked good that's being sold uncooked. I imagine take-and-bake products require special consideration when it comes to labeling, as the labeling probably needs ...

  6. coffee would be cold by the time it reached

    forum.wordreference.com/threads/coffee-would-be-cold-by-the-time-it-reached...

    Yes, exactly. The if-clause is implied. I don't think I'd use 'reaches' there but some people might. owlman5 said: "If a giraffe drank coffee, it would be cold by the time it reached the bottom of its throat." "A giraffe's coffee would be cold by the time it reached the bottom of its throat." The use of the tenses in both versions looks ...

  7. Solutions "in" or "on" - WordReference Forums

    forum.wordreference.com/threads/solutions-in-or-on.943479

    May 4, 2008. #5. Ok. It is undertood that in case of labeling a portfolio, for instance, this would be the correct expression to be used: Solution Projects. But in this specific case, the idea is the following: The Company name is Solution Ingenieria (Solution Engenharia in Porituguese). On the folder cover, above the company name, there is a ...

  8. if you take the side path to the right... - WordReference Forums

    forum.wordreference.com/threads/if-you-take-the-side-path-to-the-right.3908031

    Feb 12, 2022. #2. If you start at X, you are on the main road. If you take the path to the right, it means on your right, and you will then be going along the side path. You have been told that the black barn is where this path bends, so that means that H must be the black barn.

  9. Middle name vs two first names | WordReference Forums

    forum.wordreference.com/threads/middle-name-vs-two-first-names.2741613

    Nov 22, 2013. #2. Joh n Fitzgerald Kennedy - 1 surname. Thomas Woodrow Wilson - 1 surname. Norma Jean Mortenson- 2 first names. Barack Hussein Obama- 2 first names. In all four cases, we call the first name a first name * or given name. We call the second the middle name (whether or not it was originally a surname).

  10. has recently been retired | WordReference Forums

    forum.wordreference.com/threads/has-recently-been-retired.2767060

    I think you're doing fine. I agree with what Suzi has been telling you, Pinky88. "He is/has recently retired" or "He retired recently" are normal sentences for talking about his retirement. It is unusual to say that a person has been retired by another person or a company. "He has recently been retired" is unusual.

  11. Is the label "WC" unusual for "restrooms"? - WordReference Forums

    forum.wordreference.com/threads/is-the-label-wc-unusual-for-restrooms.610907

    Nevertheless, most people know what it means and some may use it occasionally. However it is still used in the manufacturing and architectural industries as a technical term to describe a flushing toilet apparatus or the room itself (on architectural plans toilets are marked "WC" not least because it is a compact notation).