shakespear
If it is only one delay, the correct wording of the phrase would be due to a delay. Multiple delays would constitute delays of your shipment as being correct. It depends on the situation at hand when using this type of phrase.
The reports of students will be due next Friday morning.Change to: The students' reports will be due next Friday morning.
The homophone for "to give suggestions ideas about what to do" is "two give suggestions ideas about watt to due."
The translation of 'yibai' in Chinese can vary due to the accents. The most common translation would be 'one hundred'.
'The beneficiary is unable to speak due to her disabilities' is correct.
It comes from his plays Henry V or Henry IV, and so might be in any film based on either of those two plays.
Two different plays: Henry IV Part 1, Act 1 Scene 2 and Henry V, Act III Scene 7
The correct phrase is Give the devil his dueIt means people should be correctly credited and praised when they do good, even though they are generally bad. I may berate a local politician as a rogue and a scoundrel, and then say, "but to give the devil his due he did do ....."It is a quotation from Shakespeare's plays King Henry V, Act III, Scene 7 and King Henry IV Part I Act I Scene II.
It's found in both Henry IV Part 1 and Henry V.
The Devil His Due was created in 2006.
Devil's Due was released on 01/17/2014.
The Production Budget for Devil's Due was $7,000,000.
Devil's Due Publishing was created in 1999.
Devil's Due Digital was created in 2010.
Giving the Devil His Due was created in 1994-08.
Act 1 Scene 2
It means that although a person may be your enemy and a person who you dislike, despise, have no use for or hate in general, in this one specific matter, you think that he (or she) is right or doing a good job. E.g. "Adolf Hitler was a vegetarian. Give the devil his due; the man knew how to eat healthily." Or "Mrs. Bulganin is the worst teacher we have ever had; she is cruel and unfeeling and a slave driver and knows nothing about the subject she is trying to teach. But give the devil his due; she does keep the rowdies in line."