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extendable查看 extendable 在百度字典中的解释百度英翻中〔查看〕
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英文字典中文字典相关资料:


  • word usage - Expandable vs Expansible vs Scalable - English Language . . .
    Extendable referring to physical properties (an extendable ladder) and extensible referring to versatility ability to be added to in future (an extensible system)
  • phrase usage - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    When the idiom for being uninvolved in the activity is expressed with off We speak about being off work or off duty, of being off rhythm or off our feed, so it makes sense to enter those states by getting off But the idiom is not ordinarily extendable to other situations And you have to be careful
  • prepositions - provide something for or to sb - English Language . . .
    With transitive provide sth to for sb, I think answer 2 is closer - to is more about giving or handing off something to someone, while for is more about something being made available to someone Most of the time it is a distinction without difference, and there's no solid line dividing the two, but there is a bit of a nuance: A laptop was provided to me (more likely that someone came to me
  • Why is damn a swear word while dang and darn arent?
    I want to know that why is damn considered a swear word while dang and darn are never considered swear words
  • counterfactual didn’t happen vs. hadnt happened
    In the following sentences, should "didn’t happen" or "hadn't happened" be used? Sales have gone down, and obviously we’d prefer it if that didn’t happen hadn't happened Sales
  • what’s the difference between dumb and stupid?
    There isn't much difference between dumb and stupid when referring to intelligence Dumb is probably more of an insult, while stupid can refer to a temporary state such as drunken insensibility, but English has a very large number of terms for a lack of intelligence, which typically differ less in meaning than offensiveness and appropriateness Of these, stupid is one of the most common in
  • phrase meaning - What does “Last school attended” means? - English . . .
    That might be written out as a full question as follows: What is the last school that you attended? So, that means the school you most recently attended If the form is intended for adults, it will be your final school The trick with forms like this is, I suspect, to think of the label and gap as being a short declarative sentence with a missing verb or preposition, and a space for you to
  • quotations - What if a quote contains an error - English Language . . .
    What should a writer do if s he wants to use a quote, but the quoted sentence seems to contain a grammatical error? Should the writer correct the error when including
  • nouns - The Bag of My Sisters vs The Bag of My Sister - double . . .
    The bag of my sister's, and the bag of an actress's are fine, and are examples of the double possessive, or double genitive, used in English since the 14th century Most sources advise that it can only be used in relation to people or animals and requires 'of' Of course, the regular single possessive is also possible - the bag of my sister, the bag of an actress





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