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氧化铁薄膜



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  • the meaning of sull in this sentence: He’s been in a sull
    sull noun (rare) a sulky fit, a ‘sulk’ 1972 E Welty Optimist's Daughter ii iv 97 He's been in a sull ever since you married Judge McKelva and didn't send him a special engraved invitation to the wedding Eudora Welty was an accomplished author, and this is an example of using a verb as a noun Maybe it's something she heard in real life
  • Is No a complete sentence - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    I'm aware No is what is called a "sentence word" Does that mean that on its own, it is a "complete sentence"? Please state the reason for your answer, i e do not simply answer "Yes" or "No"
  • Which is correct, cill or sill? - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    When I was at technical college in England in the 1970s, the ex-tradesmen lecturers used the spelling cill which seems to tie in with the references here (window cill, cill of lock gate) to the use of cill as a technical term among professionals like builders, architects or engineers and the sill form among the general population This also explains the wide difference in frequency; there are
  • punctuation - Use of full stop after closing inverted comma, when the . . .
    Suppose I am writing a sentence The sentence has a sentence in inverted commas After the closing inverted comma appears, the main sentence also ends As the main sentence ends, there will a full
  • Names including initials: with or without the full stop?
    To clarify, my question relates to British English Is it considered grammatically correct to use initials with and without the full stop after each capitalised letter? Example: Which is correct
  • What does the phrase Full of spit and vinegar mean?
    The typical, or more common, idiom, is full of piss and vinegar (that is, piss rather than spit) I imagine the spit variant arose during a more conservative time In contemporary America, at least, neither form would be likely to cause offense, at all Though using it would mark you as a bit old-fashioned (because on the whole, the idiom's usage has all but faded) It does mean "full of
  • Placement of acronym vs words spelled out [duplicate]
    I am confused whether to place the acronym before or after the words are spelled out For example, the first time this organisation is mentioned, which of these alternatives is more correct: The
  • Caption text punctuation: Full stops always necessary at the end?
    End punctuation for captions is ultimately a house style issue I would certainly expect a caption containing more than one complete sentence to have end punctuation But sentence fragments are subject to idiosyncratic handling At the magazine where I work, for example, we would leave unpunctuated a fragmentary caption consisting solely of a manufacturer name + product name: Samsung Galaxy S4
  • punctuation - When do you put a full-stop after an ellipsis and are . . .
    In some style guides, I see this mention of putting a full-stop after an ellipsis when you are stopping the paused sentence and going onto another new sentence, but when reading several very well-k





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