The way I learned to abbreviate it in school is "w/," for example, I might write a text message saying, "I'm going w/ Charlie 2 the concert."
The correct way to write the sentence is "two and two makes four."
Col-lar.
al//though
af-ter-noon
I believe that when you have an appositive in a sentence that when it is not necessary you surround it with commas and when it is necessary, you don't use commas. This is what I believe the rule is, but I am not 100% sure. Anyone feel free to correct me if this is in any way not correct.
The correct way to abbreviate it is: Ph.D.--with a period after the lowercase h and a period after the D
What is your father is not a correct sentence. The word father is not a what but a who. The correct way to word it would be, who is your father?
95
The best way to abbreviate any word is to eliminate the vowels. You can abbreviate funding by removing the u and i.
There is not a proper way to abbreviate the word 'consideration'. If you really do need to abbreviate the word, you could use the abbreviation of 'cons'.
the correct way to abbreviate freeway is FWY
Yes, this is the correct way to use the word soliciting.
DBA or d/b/a
You can abbreviate it DP or DOP. Either way is correct. Some companies have their own initials for this position.
yes and the correct way to spell sentence is "sentence"
The accepted abbreviation for milliliter is ml.