According to the above explanation, which I found on one of the forum threads about coordinate and cumulative adjectives, two or more adjectives of the same kind should be separated by commas (coordinate adjectives), while those of different kinds be simply grouped together without commas (cumulative adjectives).
Hello, I wonder if there is any difference between accumulate and cumulate... usage? meaning? any special nuance? Thank you.
As of today, my savings account has $57,642.00 in it. I would use "to date" to describe the cumulative effect of an ongoing process: To date, our charity has distributed 27,000 meals to the hungry. The main difference is that "to date" strongly suggests that whatever you are counting, or doing, or have, will change in some way in the near future.
"Cabergoline at a mean cumulative dose of 320 mg was associated with a higher mitral valve tenting area than in controls" gracias
Dear All, Is "under" or "in accordance with" right in the sentence below? The cumulative disbursement under/in accordance with the 2014 Financial Plan until 30/4/2014 is 766,800 USD. (self-made sentence) Thank you.
(el párrafo anterior era sobre el fracaso de la empresa Circuit City) *...As with most climbs to greatness, it involved sustained, cumulative effort, like turning a giant, heavy FLYWHEEL, each push builds upon previous work, compounding the investment of effort - days, months and years of work.
Your second alternative, "We know which his favorite kind of candy is", would be fine. Apparently, it wasn't an option on your exam. Your first alternative, "We know which it is his favorite kind of candy", is wrong because it uses two pronouns, "which" and "it" to refer to one nominal phrase "his favorite kind of candy". A problem with many multiple-choice language tests is that they don't ...