job-Job, herb-Herb, polish-Polish
The correct grammar for the sentence is: "Please note that this letter is merely an inquiry regarding your interest and availability."
The letter y is counted as a vowel when it is pronounced as a vowel, in which case it sounds the same as the long e, in words such as really. When y is used as a consonant, the pronunciation is entirely different, as in the word yellow. Remember, a vowel is the primary sound that you are making, and a consonant merely alters the pronunciation of the vowel.
He is merely a servant of the king! or... The bug is merely a small, harmless, ant!
Ganyan lang.
The word "merely" is an adverb. It is commonly used to indicate that something is done only as a formality or is just something simple.
Polish (from the nation of Poland) and polish- the act of making something shine.
polish and Polish.Additional answerI don't think this is correct. It's not the capitalisation that's causing the change in pronounciation, its the meaning of the word. If you had a sentence "Polish those shoes before you go" you wouldn't pronounce the "Polish" any differently to the same word in this sentence "I'm going to polish my shoes".But if you said "My shoes are Polish", then you would.
Yes. They are merely rounded differently. 12.0cm is rounded to 1 decimal place, and is therefore more accurate.
a perfect rhyme is hard but if you will manipulate words: irre-verseable (it's) clearly personal . . . . . (clearly not pronounced clee-er-ly but how its written) (he's not) merely versatile (pronounced "versa-tull" ) (the affects are) irreversable
The correct grammar for the sentence is: "Please note that this letter is merely an inquiry regarding your interest and availability."
The letter K had no particular significance; it was chosen merely to have a phonetically different letter from the letters C and D.
no its the fact that everyone looks different on the outside and lots of people act differently to sometimes in a good way sometimes not.Answer 2Yes. Without the soul, we would merely be another kind of animal.
The letter y is counted as a vowel when it is pronounced as a vowel, in which case it sounds the same as the long e, in words such as really. When y is used as a consonant, the pronunciation is entirely different, as in the word yellow. Remember, a vowel is the primary sound that you are making, and a consonant merely alters the pronunciation of the vowel.
Most people in Hong Kong merely say "bye-bye", although in proper Cantonese it should be "再見" (pronounced joi-gin).
Merely is an adverb, yes.Some example sentences are:I am merely just browsing.He is merely trying to help.
Initially, this would merely involve a notarized transfer of guardianship letter.
That is merely an opinion question. Many people may have different opinions about the book.