The adjective "patient" and the concept "patience" are related.
Patient people are those who show patience(forbearance) toward others, or in another sense those who are willing to wait for something to occur.
The plural noun patients means people receiving medical care or treatment.
tolerant... ive checked and double checked and that's it, need anything else?
Some people pronounce it MAR-tee, and others pronounce it Mar-TEE.
You spell it "Etcetera", for the latin meaning "The rest or The others".
Some choose to spell it like "momma" while others spell it like "mama".
Some spell in with the apostrophe in front of the "a" while others put it behind the "a". Example: Y'all or Ya'll
patient. u spell the other patient (the one which means preserving an tolerant) the same way.
Patients' diabetes. (just spell or grammar check it)
You are actually correct: while many people spell it as one word, but with a small A (Transamerica), others spell it the way you did: TransAmerica.
catsup is American and ketchup(the correct spelling) is Canadian
tolerant... ive checked and double checked and that's it, need anything else?
The homophone (sound-alike word) for "patience" is the plural noun patients (people receiving medical treatment)
When referring to the quality of being tolerant or understanding, the correct spelling is "patience."
Some people pronounce it MAR-tee, and others pronounce it Mar-TEE.
You spell it "Etcetera", for the latin meaning "The rest or The others".
The word meaning "several people who join with others in an activity" is spelt associates.
Some choose to spell it like "momma" while others spell it like "mama".
altri