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- Manual vs manually - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Manually is the adverb Manual is (in this context) the adjective Tuning can be either a verb or a noun; however, in your example, tuning the weights is a gerund phrase using the verb Here you want to modify the verb within the phrase, so use the adverb: The procedure requires manually tuning the weights If instead you wanted to modify the noun tuning, use the adjective The procedure
- Hyphenate “communicating”: communi-cating or communic-ating?
I'll note that "hyphenation" is not taught at school, and children would not normally learn hyphenate manually, and would not be expected to do so They would learn to read hyphenated texts, but this is not a skill that really needs practice So what should an English learner do? Don't worry Both hyphenations above are acceptable and readable
- adverbs - Manually installed, or, Installed manually - English Language . . .
Manually installed, or, Installed manually Ask Question Asked 9 years, 3 months ago Modified 9 years, 3 months ago
- phrases - Does subject to review mean there is a possibility of . . .
I assume Paypal doesn't manually check each transaction, and I don't care if they do or not, but I'm curious about what the phrase literally means, regardless of Paypal's potential misuse I guess "subject" here is being used in the same way a peasant is a 'subject' of a feudal lord, i e the transaction is under the lordship authority of
- word request - How to refer to vibe coding more formally? - English . . .
Computer scientist Andrej Karpathy, a co-founder of OpenAI and former AI leader at Tesla, introduced the term vibe coding in February 2025 [5] [2] [4] [1] The concept refers to a coding approach that relies on LLMs, allowing programmers to generate working code by providing natural language descriptions rather than manually writing it WIKIPEDIA There is no other term Period
- What are these structures called in American and British English?
What do you call this little building in which a guard sits and lets people in and out of a company's premises and what is the name of that horizontal bar which he raises from inside of the building (unless ofc when it's manually operated)?
- word choice - difference between continue and continue with - English . . .
Though it was very late, they continued their discussion I interpret continue as “keep discussing without stopping” Can I use continue with interchangeably?
- usage - two consecutive adverbs ending in -ly - English Language . . .
Please consider the following sentence: "He walked home seriously angrily " This sentence sounds a bit funny to my ears, even as a non-native speaker of English, an impression that is shared by an
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