
Overlayed / overlaid - WordReference Forums
Sep 11, 2007 · How do we usally say when we want to talk about image overlapping : - overlayed image or - overlaid image Thanks :)
Overlain vs overlaid - WordReference Forums
Sep 7, 2018 · Hello folks. Are both these sentences correct? 1. The ground is overlaid with the snow. 2. The snow is overlain the ground.
show through marker, overlayed into | WordReference Forums
Dec 31, 2005 · Hola de nuevo, No sé cómo traducir en esta frase las palabras destacadas: " The blue show through marker next to an entry denotes whether or not entries in that particular …
Granada (EE) - WordReference Forums
May 28, 2015 · Salve, sto traducendo una certificazione di studi che parla di una persona nata a GRANADA (EE). Mi sembra che si riferisca a Granada in Andalusia - Spagna. In questo caso, …
common interest vs general interest | WordReference Forums
Jan 11, 2022 · Greetings! What is the difference between "common interest" and "general interest"? When can they be interchangeable? When can they not be interchangeable? …
legislations? plural of legislation | WordReference Forums
May 15, 2012 · Perhaps it depends on what "legislation" means. I take it to be the law-making process, which is an abstraction and unlikely to have a plural. Some people (influenced by …
in/of the world - WordReference Forums
Sep 30, 2010 · Greetings. It is possible to say both prepositions in the following sentence? It is the most beautiful country in the world. It is the most beautiful country of the world. Thank you in …
overwhelm - what's the noun? | WordReference Forums
Feb 12, 2007 · This may sound very silly of me, but what is the noun derived from "overwhelm"? I just keep saying to myself "overwhelmedness" but obviously that's just wrong! My brain's gone …
What <a?> beautiful weather! - WordReference Forums
Apr 30, 2014 · Hi everybody, I am aware of the fact that the word „weather” is uncountable and therefore the use of the indefinite article is grammatically incorrect – still I would like to know …
For whom ... ? / Who .... for? | WordReference Forums
Feb 28, 2012 · I think it depends on what you mean by 'correct'. "For whom are these books?" is grammatically correct. "Whom" is the object of the verb. However, its use in everyday speech …