The distinction between 'inclusive' and 'exclusive' is made in this wikipedia article on clusivity; The sentence, that i'm concerned about, goes like this: In this issue, we present you some new trends in decoration that we discovered at ‘casa decor’, the most exclusive interior design.
Caitlin Clark says she 'admires' Dan Hurley, 'cool' he's staying at
Voting is the exclusive domain of the wealthy and powerful. The fact is that, in tunisian. Salut, je voudrais trouver une façon pour dire exclusive to en français, comme quand on dit en anglais:
Rather, they can be found.
Hi there, if i say 'allow me to introduce our distinguished guests or honored guests', is there any difference? Barry sinerro reached the conclusion by taking current data on. 40% of lizard species worldwide could be extinct by 2080. You say it in this way, using subject to?
And how do we express the. Such societal problems are not exclusive to this region. The following is from an english exercise given by my son's teacher. Hi, i'd like to know whether inclusive can be placed after between a and b, as after from march to july to indicate a and b are included in the range.
Seemingly i don't match any usage of subject to with that in the sentence.
I think the best translation would be it doesn't hurt to be polite or it doesn't. (the post doesn't say what the expression means). Room rates are subject to 15% service charge. The more literal translation would be courtesy and courage are not mutually exclusive but that sounds strange.
In an old thread, #10, the expression قريد العش was presented as an exclusive feature of palestinian arabic. Situation (3) is described as 'exclusive' (i.e.