I am writing a formal email to someone to send him the link of a scheduled online meeting. I have already acknowledged him before about the meeting. I can not figure out the most appropriate and fo...
4 I'm trying to find the most general term or phrase for the opposite of "online course". When a course is not online, but in a classroom, or anywhere else people interact in the same place, not through a computer, how would I call it? I'm translating some words used in messages and labels in a e-learning web application used by companies.
To emphasize the contrast between the operations through online stores and ones with physical stores, buildings, or facilities, you can use the term brick-and-mortar (also written: brick and mortar, bricks and mortar, B&M). brick-and-martar adjective a brick-and-mortar business is a traditional business that does not operate on the Internet According to Wikipedia, More specifically, in the ...
"In-store" is increasingly being used alongside "online": "This computer is available in-store and online". You might ring, email or text the store and ask "Is this available in-store, because I'd really like to look at it and use the one on display". If you actually in the store, you have choices including: "Is this (computer) available in this store?" (I think better than "in the store") or ...
According to a number of online dictionaries, it has quite a usual meaning: (of evidence or a report) suggesting very strongly that someone is guilty of a crime or has made a serious mistake However, my search in the context brought me to some newspaper articles that, I imagine, could use strong colloquial expressions, and self-development books.
Given I am X, what's valid for X is in almost all cases is the following: an adjective (I am hot, I am third, I am ready) a noun or pronoun (I am a cat, I am a worker, I am him, I am George) a verb's present participle form, these always end in -ing (I am walking ..., I am envying ...) a verb's past participle form if it makes sense to express a state and can also work as an adjective (I am ...
I found both "8-foot-tall" and "nine-feet tall" in online sources. The bronze, 8-foot-tall LBJ sculpture is slated to be installed at downtown's Little Tranquility Park, bound by Capitol, Walker, Bagby and Smith streets. (source)
I know that "online" means a person is reachable over the Internet. Can I say "staying online" while speaking about phone calls? Example: Thanks for staying online. (Thanks for not hanging up w...