
Gluing or glueing - WordReference Forums
May 3, 2007 · I beg to differ. Gluing / glueing is like aging / ageing and many other words which may or may not retain their e. See Oxford. And see BBC ESL pages. And cf judgement / …
Gluing or glueing - WordReference Forums
Jun 12, 2008 · I have a problem. Does anybody know what is the gerund of GLUE verb??? Is it gluing or glueing??? Thanks
Dismantle and remove. - WordReference Forums
Apr 30, 2018 · Dismantle could be used if whoever was doing the removal intended to fit the old floor somewhere else. Dismantle means to take something apart, but usually involves a …
Chamfering, Scarfing, Bevelling, Radius and Tapering...
May 24, 2012 · Chamfering and Beveling: removing metal along an edge (usually at 45 degrees) for appearance, or to remove the sharp (and easily deformed) edge; I associate Chamfering …
Fare da collante - WordReference Forums
Sep 6, 2009 · Ciao a tutti, sto cercando il modo di esprimere in inglese il concetto di 'fare da collante'. Es: I libri considerati da soli non avevano un filo conduttore. La lezione ha fatto da …
paste it to/on Google | WordReference Forums
Mar 9, 2010 · "paste it to" is often used. Paste it into/to the the other document, for instance. Paste it to Google sounds fine to me. Never "on" or "at." "Paste on" would be used for gluing …
expressed in / as - WordReference Forums
Jun 9, 2011 · Both look natural to me though I suggest that you use either "which" or "that" instead of merely gluing the two clauses together with the coordinating conjunction "and": This …
Paquete (abreviatura) | WordReference Forums
Aug 20, 2008 · Hola, tengo una pregunta tonta pero en mi oficina ya es casi controversial, necesito la abreviatura para la palabra paquete. Gracias de antemano.
Matting of the eyes (children) - WordReference Forums
Aug 30, 2016 · "Matting of both eyes in the morning increase the probability of a bacterial cause (...) and absence of morning gluing of either eye decrease the probability of a bacterial cause."
moderner / modernest - WordReference Forums
May 4, 2009 · The correct way is more modern and most modern, in my opinion. I have never heard moderner or modernest used in American-English.