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- apostrophe - Individuals or individuals - English Language Usage . . .
2 Individuals' if you are referring to patients in general - or you could say an individual's
- Should an apostrophe be used in this context?
You have provided this fragment: may disagre [e] with some individual's worldview It seems that you are talking about more than one individual, so we need the plural individuals here The worldview is that belonging to (possessed by) the individuals, so we need the possessive of that plural, which is individuals' with an S followed by an apostrophe If multiple individuals have the same
- any every - Any individual or any individuals? - English Language . . .
The Newyorker reports: “Any responsible individuals, any responsible groups will feel the full weight of justice,” Obama said What is correct? 'Any responsible individual' or 'Any responsible
- A word that represents a group of people working to achieve a common . . .
There are several words that means a group of people with a common interest purpose goal aim etc These words might depend on the context as well: union: a number of persons, states, etc , joined or associated together for some common purpose: student union; credit union coalition: an alliance or union between groups, factions, or parties, esp for some temporary and specific reason league: An
- What is a word to describe something that belongs exclusively to or is . . .
I'm trying to find a word (or idiom or phrase) that describes something which is perceived as belonging to one person or group of people only To contextualise this question I'll provide the paragr
- terminology - Word for the collectively leadership and important roles . . .
It kind of depends if they're a long-lasting ruling caste strata, or if they're chosen from the masses; and if they meet together to rule the clan or separately have power because of a larger system; if you just want a name for a group of roles, or for them meeting or acting together, or for the people behind the roles Ruling class, aristocracy, gentry, patriciate, leadership, establishment
- grammar - Grammatical class of we when referring to a collective . . .
What's the grammatical class of quot;we quot; when referring to a group in its entirety versus when referring to each individual member of the group For example, if I said to my girlfriend: We w
- Should it be concerned person or person concerned?
The team concerned is short for something like the team that is concerned with it While the concerned team is also valid in that context, on its own I'd be more likely understand it as referring to a team of people that are feeling worried So you're both correct, but I'd say your phrasing is generally preferable
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