Because trudging is a certain kind of walking. It's descriptive; mood-setting; and is a subcategory of the more general term "walking."
Both are correct. 'He walked by me' is more colloquial, and also conveys more possible meanings, than 'he walked past me'.
Well. Now of these days, people are saying every man's, I guess they are both correct now, but if you want to be more precise, i would say every men's because you are talking about more than one man.
Actually, the precise Cantonese pronunciation is a softer "a" -- "ah" rather than "oh" = Lahng Lahng
no, plural is anything more than 3 but less than 17
It means that the person has more than just their outside appearance - they are smarter than you think or stronger than you think or have more personality.
Trudged is moving with difficulty or labor; walked is moving normally. He trudged through the mud to retrieve the hammer that he had left before the rain. It was such a lovely day that he walked for a half hour longer than usual.
44.49 is more precise than 44.5 but less precise than 44.491 - The larger a number becomes the more precise it is.
Strolled, sauntered, skipped, trudged, trotted, scampered, marched, stomped, crept, wandered, meandered, lumbered, ran, sauntered and paced.
NO
Yes.
Yes.
Millimetres would allow for more precision than decimetre. If you can measure a smaller quantity, this always allows you to be more precise and accurate.
mm is more precise than dm. 100 mm is 1 dm.
Your calculations can be more precise, but the final result should be rounded, to avoid giving the impression that it is more exact than is justified by the measurements.
No.
A graduated cylinder is typically more precise than a beaker because it has measurement markings with smaller increments, allowing for more accurate volume readings. Beakers are generally used more for approximate measurements and mixing rather than precise volume measurements.
it uses more precise vocabulary