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- word choice - As following vs as follows - English Language . . .
You can use the following instead (e g "You must do the following: blah blah blah"), but you needn’t "You must do the following: blah blah blah"), but you needn’t Less stiff would be The reasons for these decisions are these , or Here are my reasons , or My reasons are, first,…, and the like
- definite article - The following vs. Following - English Language . . .
They're not just any examples, they're specifically the following examples, as opposed to the best examples or the examples of history or the examples I found in my sock drawer Whether something has been mentioned before is a good rule of thumb, but it is not the only rule for when you should use the definite article
- word usage - Following vs followings - English Language Learners Stack . . .
I looked up the dictionary, Merriam Unabridged, and it is the following — the following: the following one or ones — used to introduce a list, a quotation, etc <The following are some other symptoms of the condition: excessive sweating, fever, muscle aches … — Fred Cicetti, The Montague (Massachusetts) Reporter, 15 Oct 2009>
- grammar - Which of the following statement or which of the following . . .
I have seen both expressions online I don't think "which of the following statement" is grammatically correct but I'm not a native speaker so I'm not sure Which one of them is more reliably correct?
- Is the following always necessary when using a colon?
The following or as follows is often used for a long complex list, like the one below I want to add a few other notes on the sentence you wrote, as follows: My hobbies include: watching TV; listening to music; and driving
- meaning - using **to follow** or **the following**? - English Language . . .
I was reading a vocabulary book came across with: The excellent soup was harbinger of the delicious meal to follow I am confused of the "to follow" I know we can say "a delicious meal to eat" w
- verbs - Starting a sentence with Following - English Language . . .
Following this paragraph is a photograph of a carnivorous animal Your example probably works better with "the following", as in The following is an example of a carnivorous animal which might be followed by a suitable photograph The first form can be taken as a re-ordering of A photograph of a carnivorous animal follows (is following) this
- grammar - following or according to? - English Language Learners . . .
I would like to know if I should use following or according to when referring to some guidelines, such as in the following example: Stunting was diagnosed when a patient’s height was smaller than 1 40m, for men, or 1 30m, for women These cut-off points were defined following according to World Health Organization guidelines on anthropometry
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