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  1. signaling / signalling | WordReference Forums

    Sep 15, 2008 · I have encountered both writings: signaling and signalling: which one is the correct one ? Thanks

  2. downstream insulin signaling pathway - WordReference Forums

    Jun 13, 2006 · On the Web, I've found references to the "downstream insulin signaling pathway" and the "upstream insulin signaling pathway." I can't be sure, but from the context, it looks to …

  3. signaling pathways/pathway - WordReference Forums

    Jan 14, 2009 · Hola! Podrían ayudarme a traducir "signaling pathways"? el contexto es: "The early signaling pathways leading to toxic responses are the recent focus of cardiotoxicologic …

  4. virtue signaling - WordReference Forums

    Jul 22, 2021 · "Just as today on both the right and left we observe virtue signaling—acts that are more about enhancing one’s image than actual social change" It is someone that sends …

  5. signalling-signaling | WordReference Forums

    May 15, 2009 · Hi everybody I'm writting a medical article and it seems to me that both speeling are ok, and I think the difference is british or american english. Can anybody solve this …

  6. Call a timeout on someone | WordReference Forums

    Dec 23, 2022 · Hi, He made a T with his hands, signaling a time-out. He realized, as he did it, that this proved he actually had learned something in gym class. Time-out? Asked Principal Stern, …

  7. Cantonese: 唔該 (m goi) | WordReference Forums

    Oct 1, 2008 · From another thread: 謝謝 (xie xie) is Standard Chinese/Mandarin, you cannot say that in Cantonese. If you want to say "Thank you", you must say 唔該 (m goi) in return for …

  8. 啊 / 呀 | WordReference Forums

    Aug 24, 2017 · The context calls for an "unmarked" (unstressed, not emphasized) filler (啊). To sum up, we may roughly treat post-vocalic 呀 as a "marked" form of 啊. The marked form is a …

  9. Double the letter rule [hop → hoPPed / cheap → cheaPer]

    Jun 8, 2018 · From the Wikipedia article on American and British English spelling differences: British English usage is cancelled, counsellor, cruellest, labelled, modelling, quarrelled, …

  10. Shout yell scream holler. | WordReference Forums

    Feb 17, 2022 · The word "Holler" does not seem to fit the first sentence, '"Scream" tends to include a higher pitch and connotes fear, panic, rage, and other strong emotions. "Shout" is …