Yes. The train that is 'ahead of' the other one will arrive at your station 'before' the other one.
It depends on the context.Compare:# He was ahead of me in the queue. # He was before me in the the queue. In these examples, both sentences mean the same thing. Either expression may be used.But the word 'before' can be used in several ways, and not all of them can be substituted by the phrase 'ahead of.'e.g.* "I stand before you today..." cannot be replaced with "I stand ahead of you today ..."* 'Schumaker was well ahead of his rivals' cannot be replaced with 'Schumaker was well before his rivals' ! * 'In the alphabet, the letter G comes before H' means that G immediately precedes H. We would not say '... G comes ahead of H.'
Depending on how you want to use the word and what you mean a few examples are.... Passed, advanced, precedent, leading, before
it depends on what you mean by proper use,proper use of anything is to use it wisely.use for profit,use for betterment.As computer technology is concerned we use it in way which helps us best.
No. Country names are proper nouns and we don't use the before proper nouns eg the Paris.
Yes, the stain should be shaken before use to ensure proper consistency and even application.
It is redundant, you only need 1 or the other.
Yes. An hourly is properly pronounced "a-nowerly."
He liked to work ahead of the class.
I finished the test ahead of time
To write a proper email effectively, start with a clear subject line, use a professional tone, keep it concise and to the point, use proper grammar and punctuation, and always proofread before sending.
I stand before you today with heavyhearted dread of the events that surely will unfold in the dark days ahead.
Many people who are playing sports games, are looking ahead to see what type of strategy they can use in order to win the game. Some teams plan ahead before they begin playing the game so all the team members are on the same page.