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What is the difference between a "technologist" and a "technician"?
a technician works primarily on things; a technologist works primarily on technology; The object of the technician / technologist is the key. So looking at the Wikipedia entries, one could argue that. an Architectural technologist specializes in technology, not …
Differences between "technic" and "technique"
2011年3月21日 · Technique and technic are synonyms (as shown on Merriam-Webster's entry for technic).. Note that technique is by far more used than technic.
What do you call a person who is resistant to new technology
2022年9月10日 · Just because it's new doesn't mean it's better; or that trashing years of wisdom and experience using tech that is paid for is a good idea.
What's the difference between "imbalance" and "unbalance"?
Imbalance should be used to describe procedures, regulations, laws, labour. E.g., one can say in a work environment, "I am executing the same job as you and producing more positive results than you but yet you earn a higher salary".
Struggling with participle phrases - adjectival vs adverbial
2023年3月18日 · I'm struggling to identify when a participle phrase is adjectival vs. adverbial. For example: Turning into the parking lot , the girl could see that lines were already forming. ^ " Turning into the parking lot = Adverbial present-participle phrase" --> but is it modifying the girl, or her seeing that lines were already forming?
"Who are" vs "who is" - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
2014年12月22日 · Pretty funny how (for me) this is the second google search result for “who are vs who is” and it’s closed as off topic and has a wrong answer. – user267172 Commented Nov 17, 2020 at 0:54
"Would it be" vs "Will it be" - English Language & Usage Stack …
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Using "of" vs. "on" - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
2020年7月28日 · "Schedule production on these materials" vs. "Schedule production of these materials" These two confuse me as the following sentence sound more appropriate using "of." "Production of these materials will take place in November." -- In this case, we cannot use "on." Thanks in advance!
"As on 16 May" vs. "as of 16 May" — which is correct?
2013年1月3日 · They are both correct but mean different things in different situations. As of May 16 indicates the start of something; from that time on, while as on May 16 is completely different.
meaning - "Covered with" vs. "covered in" vs. "covered by"
All three are in use, and the differences are subtle; but they do exist. "Covered by" generally means that the covering actually hides the thing that is covered: it would usually be an object (a sheet, a lid, a curtain) rather than a substa