|
Canada-0-STORAGE ไดเรกทอรีที่ บริษัท
|
ข่าว บริษัท :
- For a long time vs in a long time - English Language Usage Stack . . .
We have been living here for a long time (present perfect continuous) - It began in the past, and still lasts They lived in New York for a long time (past simple) - The action began and finished in the past
- long long的最大值和最小值分别是多少?_百度知道
long long的最大值和最小值分别是多少?long long的最大值:9223372036854775807long long的最小值:-9223372036854775808拓展资料:一字节表示八位,即:1byte = 8 bit;int: 4byte = 32 bit 有符号signed范围:2^3
- grammaticality - Is long time no see grammatically correct? - English . . .
Long time is comprehensible, and an exchange like the following is plausible: Alice: Hey, it's been a long time Bob: Yeah, long time no see! In this hypothetical conversation, I think it's plausible that Bob's long time is a reference back to Alice's long time, so it seems to me that long time no see is compositional rather than opaque
- it took me a long time vs I took a long time to do x
I remember my high school teacher explicitly saying that it took me a long time to do x was the correct form and I took a long time to do x was not In recent years, I seem to remember hearing
- What is the origin and scope of usage of the phrase So long. . . . used . . .
In the context of Whitman's usage it is amusing to dive into the discussion of "so long" that runs across multiple numbers of Notes and Queries, starting with this one from July 24, 1880: " So LONG "—This is a queer expression, used in the sense of "good-bye," often heard int he United States, but always by uneducated people
- How long have you [had been having] this? - Cont. or Simple?
How long have you had that camera? The following sentence if we add context to it could be: When did you buy it? When did you get it? Which would imply more or less the same meaning, as the answer would be the period of time (e g 2 years, or 2 years ago ) The question itself implies that the camera is still in possession of the hearer, s he still owns it Past simple of have in this
- For how long have you been. . . vs. how long have you been. . .
The variant 'For how long have you been waiting?' is outdated and sounds stuffy; 'How long have you been waiting for?' is far more common, but dropping the for is commoner still
- Is “since long” correct English, and if so what does it mean?
In relation to the example of “long” or, more usually, “a long time”, although not a precisely specified duration of time, ‘for’ is still used: e g “We have lived here for a long time ” Evidence I don’t know whether this is classified as grammar, but, if not, it is one of usage and idiom
- poetry - How does one tell the difference between long and short . . .
Hi, TheIrishGuy I edited the first paragraph of your question to make it more succinct, but I think the second paragraph also needs clarification Specifically, when you ask "how do you differentiate?" do you mean "how do you differentiate between one long and two short syllables?" or "how do you differentiate between limericks that follow the long-short-short pattern and limericks that
- Once upon a time vs. a long time ago - English Language Usage . . .
How is the meaning of "once upon a time" different from "a long time ago"? Literally, is that what it means? There seems to be repetition in once and upon a time How is this sentence broken up?
|
|