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  2. meaning - Recipe of/for a dish, the difference - English Language...

    ell.stackexchange.com/questions/137282/recipe-of-for-a-dish-the-difference

    1. "Recipe of" describes the components or ingredients in a recipe: "Its recipe of brandy, myrrh, and cayenne indicates it would indeed promote a heat..." Recipe for" describes the end result of the recipe: "A recipe for mulled brandy." It is common even for native speakers to confuse the two usages. "A recipe of leeks, milk, salt and pepper ...

  3. Say the recipe called for confectioners sugar, brown sugar, granulated sugar, invert sugar and 10 other types of sugar. The sentence could be correct as "A lot of sugars have been added to the milk". I consider your answer correct, but wanted to point out that there is a case where "have" would be correct and "sugar" would need to be changed to ...

  4. 4. For the sentence you provided, "I would be grateful if you would acknowledge receipt of this letter," you could use "receiving" in place of "receipt of." "Reception," used to mean the act of receiving, has a connotation that's linked with receiving a signal on an electronic device like a phone or a TV which, if used in your context, would ...

  5. recipe, simile, hyperbole; but such exceptions are very rare compared to the large number of words that follow the general guideline. Also, when words have endings such as -ple, -cle, and -dle, those letters typically form a syllable at the end, as in sample, icicle, and candle.

  6. "I have also attached the screenshot of the faculty list at University which I was on." It took me a while to figure out the meaning of the sentence (maybe because of prejudice, expecting badly mangled English, but maybe because it is unusual).

  7. An alternate understanding of the in the second one, is that attention is being drawn specifically to the fact that the basis is anhydrous and solvent-free, again as in a recipe: "Stir in the peeled and blanched carrots", that is, the carrots which have been peeled and blanched. This refers to a previous instruction in the recipe to peel and ...

  8. When can we use 'much' in affirmative clauses?

    ell.stackexchange.com/questions/119287

    To sum up: If much qualifies a simple adverb, a simple adjective or the whole sentence, you can use it in a negative sentence but you can't use it in an affirmative sentence- you must use a lot for sentences and very for simple adverbs and simple adjectives.

  9. If we are talking about something this will reference the thing we were just talking about where as I will say that to reference something which is more remote such as from another day. "This is a recipe for a blueberry pie. I liked it alot. Yesterday I tried a strawberry pie. That was a mistake. This blueberry recipe is much better." –

  10. word choice - English Language Learners Stack Exchange

    ell.stackexchange.com/questions/16606

    The meaning of the two words is the same. But "whole" is the Germanic word (in German heil, without no part lacking), and "entire" is the Latin word (integer). So the difference is not a semantic one (that is in meaning), but a stilistic one. "whole" is colloquial, "earth-bound" language. At a house wall I read: "We don't want no piece of the ...

  11. word usage - English Language Learners Stack Exchange

    ell.stackexchange.com/questions/54050/pet-person-or-dog-person

    1. I think people would tend to say "I'm not an animal person" more than they would say "I'm not a pet person." If you are scared of pets, you are probably scared of animals in general. In this case, I would probably say either that you're not a dog person or that you're scared of dogs. From personal experience, no matter what you say, the ...

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