
What is the difference between "education program" and …
Feb 26, 2017 · Something is "educational" if it teaches--it could be on any topic. An "education program" would be something specifically regarding education. Your example is an education …
English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Q&A for speakers of other languages learning English
difference between "education" "educational " "educated"
education means the study we do or the knowledge we get from schools and colleges etc. educated means someone who has received the knowledge (education). educational means …
Difference between "where are you from" and "where do you …
What is the difference between "where are you from" and "where do you come from"? Are they the same? Are they used in the same situations or not? When you see someone for the first …
Interesting unusual usage of a participle - English Language …
Mar 9, 2025 · If you want to practice formal English, I would choose modern formal writing, like educational texts, official documents, etc. If you enjoy the book, feel free to read it, but I agree …
Comparing "got used to", "have gotten used to", "get used to", …
The phrasal verb to get used to means to “get or become familiar or accustomed with through experience”, ie, to become habituated to something. The several forms in the sample text – …
'Background on/in sth' - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Aug 6, 2022 · I wrote 'My educational background is on classical music' and Grammarly suggested correcting it into 'My educational background is in classical music'. I looked up …
word choice - Practical training, internship or practice? - English ...
Jul 1, 2017 · Some educational courses organise much shorter periods of "work experience" but these are not always the same as an internship. practice The word practice does have …
What is a very general term or phrase for a course that is not online?
Jun 2, 2017 · This Google search shows many examples of face-to-face being used to describe classes traditional classroom courses that are not online. Another term used in educational …
I have read and agree / agreed with the terms and conditions
Regardless of which is more commonly used, I need to point out a potential issue with parallelism, which you've alluded to in your question. (I will bypass the issue of which pronoun to use, with …