It would be used at the very first event, and never again. The understanding is that it will occur yearly from that point on.
"More swiftly" is proper usage. "Swifter" is not.
No. The expression " due to" must not start a sentence, although it is certainly done by very many careless speakers. Proper use of "due to" is as an adjectival phrase modifying the subject of the phrase or sentence: This shortfall is due to a loss.
Proper usage of this phrase is "I can never..." If you want to use "can't" instead it would be "I can't ever..."
The preferred usage seems to be, "with compliments of ...."
vocabulary, articulation, delivery, expression, language, intonation, phrasing, phrase, usage, pronunciation, fluency, eloquence, wording
"Into" is used to indicate movement or direction, while "in to" is used when "in" is part of a verb phrase (e.g., "to turn in to the parking lot").
The original or first Archipelago was the proper name for the Aegean Sea. Later the usage shifted to refer to the Aegean Islands.
Frank and I
The phrase "fellow colleague" is redundant, as both "fellow" and "colleague" convey a similar meaning of someone who works with you in the same profession or organization. You can simply use "colleague" to refer to someone you work with.
Proper usage and pronunciation.
The proper pronouciation is ; It will be worth their time?
The definition and proper usage of the word managed is to handle or direct with skill. An example of the proper use of the word manage is "The business is managed by the owner's daughter.".
Audited
Divide actual annual usage by the daily peak usage multiplied by 365 days
The use of Proper needs to be defined in this usage for this question to make sense.
No, its only usage seems to be as a proper name.
no