WHAT IS A WORD FOR SOMEONE WHO HAS MULTIPLE SKILLS/TALENTS?
Mar 27, 2017 I'd say conversationally saying "John's good at everything" or "A multi-talented guy" comes across more conversationally than calling someone a "Renaissance man" .. which … From english.stackexchange.com
WORD TO DESCRIBE A PERSONALITY WHICH HAS MANY INTERESTS?
Nov 9, 2013 Multi-faceted also works, but bear in mind that that term is used much more often than many-faceted to describe also the characteristics of a crystal or precious stone. … From english.stackexchange.com
MULTIDAY OR MULTI-DAY - ENGLISH LANGUAGE & USAGE STACK EXCHANGE
Sep 18, 2019 For instance, OxfordDictionariesOnline gives only multi-day. Wiktionary is better, saying that both variants are acceptable. Wiktionary is better, saying that both variants are … From english.stackexchange.com
WHY DOES THE MULTI-PARAGRAPH QUOTATION RULE EXIST?
The addition of quotation marks at the start of each paragraph within a multi-paragraph quotation ensures that a casual or forgetful reader is reminded that the paragraph he is reading is (part … From english.stackexchange.com
GRAMMAR - "MULTI-AWARD-WINNING" OR "MULTI-AWARD WINNING"?
Jul 22, 2022 Which one is the correct use? I know that "award-winning" uses a hyphen and that "multi" needs a hyphen, but I'm not sure if the hyphen gets a … From english.stackexchange.com
MULTIPLE VS MULTI - ENGLISH LANGUAGE & USAGE STACK EXCHANGE
Jun 14, 2015 Multi is a prefix meaning "more than one" or "having or involving many". So you can safely use "multi-agent" as an adjective. When you use a hyphen to make an adjective, as … From english.stackexchange.com
If 'multi' is used in contrast to and alongside another word that is not a valid prefix, then, given the latitude that exists here, I'd opt for the hyphen. So I might write 'I took the multivitamins', but in … From english.stackexchange.com
"MULTI-" PREFIX PRONUNCIATION - ENGLISH LANGUAGE & USAGE STACK …
Feb 26, 2012 The OED says " < classical Latin multi-, combining form ... of multus much, many". I think the use of /aɪ/ is from analogy with the traditional English pronunciation of Latin words … From english.stackexchange.com
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