Wednesday is spelled correctly more often than Tuesday because Wednesday's spelling aligns more closely with its pronunciation. The "nesday" ending is phonetically straightforward, while "Tuesday" has a silent first 'u' and is less intuitive to spell.
You have spelled it correctly: continuing. You drop the 'e' and add '-ing'. He was continuing his studies at a community college so he could be close to his parents. Continuing to text while driving can lead to a traffic accident. CONTINUING : ongoing, current
The problem is the verb in "Can you mend this until Tuesday" is incorrectly spelled. It should be mind.Can you mind my cat until Tuesday?Mind in this context means "to look after, tend, watch, be a guardian over".Would you mind my son?Would you mind my books while I buy a cup of coffee?Mend on the other hand is to repair, often a repair that requires sewing, gluing, etc.Would you mend my boots if I drop them off on Tuesday?Can you mend my ripped book before my class on Tuesday?May I ask you to mend my torn underwear before Tuesday?
Both "spell" and "spelled" are correct for the past tense of the verb "to spell." In American English, "spelled" is more commonly used, while in British English, "spelt" is often used instead.
No, television is not a homograph. A homograph is a word that is spelled the same as another word but has a different meaning and often a different pronunciation. Television is spelled uniquely and does not have another word spelled the same way.
The name Mary in Yiddish is often spelled as Miriam (מרים).
All of the words in the question are spelled correctly. The 11-letter word that is most often spelled incorrectly is...incorrectly.
no, but it's often abbreviated that way. Through.
That is the correct spelling for "accounted" (most often used with the preposition for), It is the past tense of the verb "to account."
The 4th of July falls on Tuesday 4 times every 28 years. It falls on Tuesday as often as it falls on any weekday.
None are, always. But the word "incorrectly" is often spelled that way, correctly.
Fat Tuesday
The Commissioners meet every Wednesday in Brussels. However, during the European Parliament's plenary sessions, their meeting is held on Tuesday in Strasbourg.
Yes. It is the present participle of the verb to wipe. Verbs that end in E often drop the E when adding the suffix -ing.
If December starts on a Monday, Tuesday or Wednesday, it will have 5 Wednesdays. That would be about 4 or 5 out of every 10 years. So it happens quite regularly.
Email is correct. Some people still use e-mail, with a hyphen, but email without a hyphen is used much more often.
You have spelled it correctly: continuing. You drop the 'e' and add '-ing'. He was continuing his studies at a community college so he could be close to his parents. Continuing to text while driving can lead to a traffic accident. CONTINUING : ongoing, current
Succinet is raw, evaporated cane sugar. It is more correctly spelled "sucanat" but I've often seen it spelled this way too. So here is the sentence . . . "For a more healthy organic recipe, you may wish to substitute sucanat for white sugar."