
Art or art forms - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
2020年11月13日 · Art can be used not just for types of artistic expression, but for individual works of art as well, whereas art form specifically refers to some kind of practice or medium of …
word usage - Form of art/work of art/ artwork/art forms - English ...
2020年11月28日 · "Dancing, singing, music, literature, poetry are works of art art forms or forms of art, but not artworks. But Is Mona Lisa a form of art or an art form? I don't think so, but I may …
plural forms - Comics is or are - Comics is or are - English …
2020年11月14日 · Although "art form" is singular, the sentence does not pigeonhole all comics into one single art form. Comics themselves do not only feature one form of art - there is the …
politeness - "Please Find Attached or "Please Find Enclosed" in a ...
2016年7月7日 · In email writing, when we are attaching any document, what is the correct, formal and more polite way to write: Please find attached "Monthly status report" PDF for your …
word choice - 'play', 'practice' and/or 'do' martial art? - English ...
2016年7月28日 · This is the verb I would use to mean "training in the martial art". You do occasionally see people use "to do karate", as do is about the most generic verb one can use …
difference - "Begin to" or "Begin v.-ing" - English Language …
2021年5月10日 · But syntactically it would make no difference whatsoever if we reversed the two verb forms: Begin to read this procedure, unless you have already begun reading it. Or indeed …
indefinite article - Ellipsis: an apple or (a) banana - English ...
2025年3月28日 · @GJC I'm British and these seem natural to me (although I would note that "salt and pepper" actually functions as a single noun, and unlike the latter doesn't typically allow an …
"I'm born and brought up in India" - I don't want to use the 'past ...
2014年5月21日 · The expression you want is. I was born and raised in India. Both verbs are completed actions, so they are expressed in the past tense.
countability - “paint”: mass noun vs count noun - English …
Jackson Pollock dropped paints on canvas seemingly at random. (I have always thought the noun "paint" is uncountable when referring to color/colored liquid/solid pigment.
"At risk", or "at-risk"? What's the difference?
OP already knows that two-word adjectival forms are usually hyphenated even when they're not hyphenated in other syntactic roles, so there's no actual question to answer. – FumbleFingers …