
grammaticality - Pre-requisite vs prerequisite - English Language ...
Jun 3, 2019 · Looking up this on English exchange I couldn't seem to find a single source of truth: Instance 1 - "Prerequisite" in search: "Prerequisite for" vs. …
"Prerequisite for" vs. "prerequisite to" - English Language & Usage ...
Aug 14, 2012 · According to Humboldt (Aksan, 1998), language is a prerequisite to the materialization of thought. The prerequisites of these procedures are the reader's actual and …
antonyms - Word for opposite of *prerequisite*? Something that is ...
Feb 15, 2016 · Prerequisite describes something that must exist before another thing. Is there a word that describes an opposite, that is, something that is made possible because of the …
differences - "Precondition" vs. "prerequisite" - English Language ...
In conclusion, security is the precondition of political freedom and political freedom is the prerequisite for economic freedom. Do precondition and prerequisite mean the same in the …
Hyphenation of "prerequisite" - English Language & Usage Stack …
Apr 29, 2011 · I'm proofreading my thesis, and found that TeX in its infinite wisdom had decided to hyphenate prerequisite as pre-req-ui-site. I've replaced it with pre-re-qui-si-te, but I'm a bit …
What is a word that describes when someone requires a certain …
Jun 2, 2015 · Sweetness and a quiet demeanor are prerequisites." also appropriate, as Fumble Fingers suggested in his comment, "Sweetness and a quiet demeanor are "a must-have".
Under what circumstances should I use 'requisite' and 'required'?
Jan 14, 2011 · Thanks for the detailed and useful answer (+1). However, I'm not entirely swayed by the argument that 'required' should be used becuase it is used more often. Does this mean …
grammaticality - Abbreviation for "requirements" - English …
Dec 22, 2016 · What is the correct abbreviation for the word "requirements"? Specifically, I am looking for the plural form of the abbreviation. I have seen various usages including: req's …
What does "something 101" mean? [closed] - English Language
Many times I saw the phrase something 101, such as Microsoft Excel 101. What exactly does it mean?
phrase requests - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
Mar 13, 2014 · @mplungjan I did find that question, but I'm not really looking in a software feature context, so "optional requirements" definitely sounds oxymoronic without being relevant …