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  • Whats the proper way to handwrite a lowercase letter A?
    I believe every one of the images that came up for me has some form of the OP's version 2 for a printed a (At some point as an adult I switched over to the other a (fig 1), perhaps thinking there was less chance of my a being mistaken for an o )
  • Is there any reason to prefer the AIC or BIC over the other?
    There is no such constraint on Akaike's original derivation, or, to be clearer, on the derivation using the AIC as an estimator of the Kullback-Leibler divergence In fact, in a paper that I'm working on, I show somewhat "empirically" that the AIC can even be used for model selection of covariance structures (different number of parameters
  • grammar - Pick up someone vs Pick someone up? - English Language . . .
    Oxford Learner's Dictionary provides this notation for the relevant meanings of pick up: pick somebody <-> up pick somebody something <-> up The <-> means that the word before and after can appear in reverse order Technically, in example 1 I can either "pick the baby up" or "pick up the baby "
  • When should Mom and Dad be capitalized?
    The (original or quoted?) passage uses it correctly, but the OP's understanding may not be completely correct You might want to address that it seems like the OP thinks use (3) should be capitalized, but this is an instance where it's used to mean "father" and would not be capitalized, in opposition to (not "just like") use (4), where it's a name
  • Is it CoViD? Or COVID? Covid? How should the word be spelled?
    Official nomenclature and journalistic practice A recent item by Elisabeth Ribbans, "COVID or Covid?The comfort of pedantry at a time of national crisis," in The Guardian (April 19, 2020), asserts that initial-capping acronyms (abbreviations pronounced phonetically as approximately the sum of their letter sounds, rather than as as a series of names of the constituent alphabet letters) is the
  • Acronyms and Initialisms- Uppercase, Lowercase, or either
    The Chicago Manual of Style, sixteenth edition (2010) briefly addresses the question of whether the spelled-out form of an initialism or acronym should be initial-capped if the short form is capitalized, at 10 6 Capital versus lowercase for acronyms and initialisms:
  • verbs - Can was be abbreviated as s? - English Language Usage . . .
    The apostrophe + s is usually understood to mean a shortened form of is or has It would not be understood to represent a different tense of be She's at home yesterday would be read as She is at home yesterday which is incorrect (of course, the apostrophe can shorten other words as well, such as have, but that is not relevant to your
  • Difference between under, underneath, below and beneath
    "The child's ball rolled under the couch," and "The rat ran under the porch " (Most would not say "The rat ran below the porch") You could also say "The rat ran underneath the porch," really emphasizing the feeling in the listener's or reader's mind that the rat is now hiding under the porch
  • Is the possessive of one spelled ones or ones?
    Here's an example of what I mean: Someone left his her their hat on the table No one likes to have his her their word doubted We don't use someone's or no one's in this context (i e , to refer back to an earlier use of someone or no one in the same sentence) However, many people would say the following sentence: One does not like to have one





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