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  • meaning - Independence vs. Independency - English Language Usage . . .
    On their own, Google shows that the "Independence" keyword is used ~500x more frequently than its archaic counterpart However, when you add the keywords "Math" and "Statistics", it is only used ~50x more frequently In fact, nearly 50% of the references to "Independency" also contain "Math" and "Statistics"
  • Word for a country declaring independence from an empire
    In the treaty of 1783 that ended the war of American independence, Britain ceded Vermont to the U S A (But Vermont's government didn't recognize that and continued to consider itself independent of the U S A until 1791 ) (It's in Article II of the treaty, which doesn't mention Vermont by name, but says the parties agree that the boundaries of
  • etymology - What are the patterns rules for determining U. S. state . . .
    The main problem is that no simple convention will work without creating duplicates Put yourself in the shoes of the Postmaster General, when you want to start standardizing two-letter abbreviations for each state
  • What is the difference between Autonomy and independence?
    The concept of independence implies a rejection of rules and regulations but this is not the case in autonomy This is the key difference between autonomy and independence So this means that independence is something that is "not depending" on another thing, this is why the adjective form is used in common language, "I like to be independent
  • Wholistic vs holistic - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    "Wholistic" was first used in 1941, while "Holistic" was first used in 1926 (O E D) But none the less, "wholistic" is the preferred word when describing something viewed a whole, rather than in parts, since "holistic medicine" comes with a 'whole' bunch of mental baggage that has nothing to do with viewing something as a whole
  • Usage of the word orthogonal outside of mathematics
    This independence is what motivates the other meanings; an orthogonal line of argument in debate might be interesting in itself, but doesn't advance the main thrust of the debate, for instance It's just as well that the mathematical use of "normal" doesn't bleed across like this, because "normal people" would then be at right-angles to reality
  • meaning - Is it alright or allright? - English Language Usage . . .
    In practice I find both spellings being used From a logical point of view, "allright" (as in: "all's right nbsp;— everything is fine") seems correct However, I recall hearing that "alright" is the
  • capitalization - constitution or Constitution? - English Language . . .
    Constitution: Capitalize references to the U S Constitution, with or without the "U S " Place "constitutional" in lowercase Declaration of Independence, Bill of Rights, First Amendment, and other legislation and treaties are capitalized
  • Which is correct: with regards to, in regards with, regarding?
    I have been using the following phrases but I am still not confident that they are grammatically correct and sound right: quot;in regards with something quot; quot;with regards to something quot;
  • Content or Contents? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    The New Oxford American Dictionary entry for content has: 1 (usu contents) the things that are held or included in something: he unscrewed the top of the flask and drank the contents | he picked up the correspondence and scanned the contents





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