
Lot No. vs Batch No. - WordReference Forums
2007年5月18日 · The samples do not comprise the whole lot or batch. If I were your customer and received a report on parts you were manufacturing for me and you supplied test results for "Lot Nos TD01-TD10" I would assume 1) that lot numbers were assigned sequentially from TD01 onwards and 2) you had taken a test sample from each lot .
It is no doubt that vs There is no doubt that - WordReference …
2018年10月5日 · does exist, but it's about a thousand times less common than "there is no doubt that..." I think you should forget it. There is however, the phrase "it is, no doubt," (note the commas), which is simply an inversion of "no doubt it is". No doubt it is that phrase which is confusing you. Or: It is, no doubt, that phrase which is confusing you.
ver a alguien + hacer / haciendo (infinitivo / gerundio)
2009年10月6日 · Les voy a demonstrar la diferencia entre los dos oraciones. Lo aprendi estudiando mucho.(I learned it by studying a lot). No se si sea correcto pero tiene sentido a mi. Lo vi cruzando la calle. I saw him by crossing the street. o en otras palabras. I was able to see him by crossing the street. If I did not cross the street, I would not have ...
There is / there are a lot of people | WordReference Forums
2008年6月24日 · There is a lot of sellers, they have a lot of things to sell And "There is" usually gets contracted, particularly in speech There's a lot of sellers, they have a lot of things to sell That's as far as "There-insertion" is concerned. If you make "a lot of sellers" the subject, agreement will necessarily be plural:
There is/are lots of food/foods | WordReference Forums
2017年7月23日 · (2) Agreement with "existential there." The contracted form "there's" is, for all practical purposes, neither singular nor plural (and therefore neutral when it comes to countable/noncountable), in the sense that it's commonly used both ways: There's a lot of food on the table; There's lots of foods on the table. To me, this is simply a ...
Lot (notice of tender) - WordReference Forums
2011年3月11日 · Hi everyone ! How would you call in English "un lot" in the case of a notice of tender ? For instance, let's imagine a notice of tender requesting the purchase of several types of rail cars: Lot n°1 = wagon citerne Lot n°2 = Wagon trémie Lot n°3 = …
EN: I am no X / I am not (a) X - WordReference Forums
2010年6月8日 · "I am no artist." is a little more complicated than it sounds. a) It is often used in a longer sentence, showing a sort of contrast. "I'm no artist, but I think that painting is terrible." "I'm no artist, but I know what art I like, and it's not that."
"no problem" vs "no problems" - WordReference Forums
2018年1月5日 · 2 sounds more usual to me but 1 sounds OK. I think Australians say no problems a lot. "No problem(s)" is a set phrase and you cannot draw any general conclusions from it about the use of nouns after no.
however much vs. no matter how | WordReference Forums
2008年12月9日 · B: Sure thing, no matter how much time I don't have I will come. or however much time i don't have I will come. - I like your house and want to keep ranting this room. But no matter how much I like, if the rent is over 130$ I think I can’t afford it. - however much we love, someday will break up. Love is vanity and empty. thanks a lot~
a lot people have / has | WordReference Forums
2007年3月23日 · A lot of people: "Lot" es el sujeto. En este contexto, la palabra "lot" no tiene forma gráficamente plural, menos la forma informal de "lots," cuyo significado es sinónimo: "A great many." Ambas son plurales.