It is grammatically correct, yes.
The prefix "neg" means "no" or "not." It is used to indicate negation or absence of something.
Absence is a noun.
absence = gone, not there near absence = almost gone, something remains (i.e. the near absence of this chemical in food, meaning for all practical purposes it is absent, yet trace amounts remain of irrelevance for health)
Absence is stressed on the first syllable.
No. It is not a sentence, but a dependent clause.
They thought the Loyalists were traitors to the colonist cause, in short, and therefore subject to anything that the Patriots dished out (i.e. treating them like dirt).
They thought the Loyalists were traitors to the colonist cause, in short, and therefore subject to anything that the Patriots dished out (i.e. treating them like dirt).
They thought the Loyalists were traitors to the colonist cause, in short, and therefore subject to anything that the Patriots dished out (i.e. treating them like dirt).
there r various types of dished end u need to define it correctly.
dished
There is no dirt in a hole because a hole is defined by the absence of material, in this case dirt. If you were to fill the hole with dirt, it would require 24 cubic feet of dirt to completely fill it.
No gaybo
Abiosis refers to the absence of life. It is more usually used as abiotic, not abiosis. You could say "The study of abiosis was a little unnerving to me."
flat, irregular, domed, dished
The word for dirt in French is "saleté" or "terre".
We say there is no such thing as cold because cold is the absence of heat, just as darkness is the absence of light. Cold is a subjective perception of the absence of warmth, rather than a tangible entity in itself.
The past tense of "dish" is "dished".