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  • pronunciation - Are patients and patience homophones? - English . . .
    These two words, Patients vs Patience, are no different The words patients and patience are homophones, which mean they sound the same when they are spoken, but when they are spelt, spellings are different and have different meanings
  • possessive needed? . . . . to impact patients lives by. . . .
    Is a possessive needed on the word patients in the following mission statement? I feel it clutters the phrase somewhat and need advice To meaningfully impact patients' lives by democratizing
  • conjunctions - have no patient vs dont have patient - English . . .
    First of all, I think you mean "patience" As @shef said, "patient" is an adjective, while "patience" is the noun There is also a noun "patient", but that refers to someone being treated by a doctor "You don't have patience and courage" is valid, but the "and' is unlikely A fluent speaker would be more likely for someone to say, "You don't have patience OR courage" Using "and" means that
  • Can I use in-need patients instead of patients in need?
    The phrase in-need (attributive) is much less common in this sense than in need (predicative) even when compared to just patients in need Please note a factor is already applied to the latter Also, in-need patients is not found Of the top usages of in-need described above, only two are paired with nouns, society and population
  • Has or Have? Which is grammatically correct and why?
    English verbs in present tense have a different form for the third person singular that ends in s for all verbs except to be which has more forms Has is that form for have I have X, you have X, he she it has X, we have X, they have X Each is a plural pronoun You only use it when referring to a group of things So you don't use the third person singular form a of a verb with it Each one is
  • There is a need for a lot of patience vs It takes a lot of patience . . .
    Here are correct versions I have highlighted the needed corrections There is a need for a lot of patience to get to one’s goal It takes a lot of patience to get to one’s goal both mean the same thing although the first strikes me as a somewhat stilted version of A lot of patience is needed to reach your goals
  • possessives - A patients guide or A patients guide? - English . . .
    If you use the S, it must be "A patient's guide", which implies that the guide is possessed by a specific patient, or "Patients' guide", which implies that the guide is for multiple patients
  • Is there any difference between being ill and sick?
    While those might mean the same for the laymen, from a medical point of view, there is a difference between illness and sickness Medical sociology has long made the distinction between illness and sickness Illness is the objective diagnosis that an external impartial observer is able to make based on the constellation of symptoms which the patient presents Sickness is the social role that
  • grammar - confusion between select and selected - English Language . . .
    Scheduled Caste and Scheduled Tribe applicants are half as likely to get selected for a Ph D why selected is used in above sentence why not select is used
  • sick vs. patient? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    A patient can be sick but it is not necessary A Patient is a person that go to a medical facility such as a clinic or a hospital Very often, patients go to these facilities or others just to get an examination as healthy people or just to maintain their "health" So "patient" can be either sick or not sick





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