About 50 results
Open links in new tab
  1. What's the difference between 'a year' and 'the year'?

    Jan 26, 2017 · 'A year' can be any year without any specification. But 'the year' means a particular/specified year or the one which is already mentioned and thereby known. E.g: In a year …

  2. 'Year' or 'Years'? - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    The second and final year gives the impression that you mean one specific year, which was at the same time your second, as well as your final year. For example: In the fifth and last year of the war, the …

  3. pronunciation - Difference between "the ear" and "the year" - English ...

    Jan 18, 2026 · As pointed out in the answer to the question linked to in your original question on Linguistics, the glottal stop is non-mandatory and unreliable – it may or may not be there for any …

  4. Difference between "across the year" and "throughout the year"?

    Jun 21, 2022 · I'd say 'across the year' hints strongly at sporadic events etc, whereas 'throughout the year' speaks more of consistent results. But this is opinion, and I doubt I'll easily find supporting …

  5. The New Year or New Year - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    Dec 29, 2022 · Unless you're talking about Chinese (or Persian) New Year, the name of the celebration isn't New Year but New Year's Eve, and it happens on the last day of the old year.

  6. "Year olds" or "year-olds" - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange

    Dec 28, 2014 · 1 I would use a suspended en-dash: I was an advisor to the 14– and 15–year-olds. The choice of open (year old), closed (yearold) or hyphenated (year-old) compounds is often a difficult …

  7. When to use “in the last year”, “last year” and “in the past year”?

    When you say "the last year" you think of a row of things and you choose the thing at the end. When you say "the past year" you think that an event has gone by or passed. If I would look at Google N-gram …

  8. If annual means one year, is there any word for two,three, four.. year

    Jul 29, 2011 · From WordWeb: Annual: Occurring or payable every year What is the corresponding single word for occurring every two year, three year, four year etc. I understand that it's surely not …

  9. grammar - Should we use year-end or end-year? - English Language ...

    I wonder that should we use mid-year and year-end or to use mid-year and end-year. What 's diffirent?

  10. Under the Chicago Manual of Style, does "year over year" need ...

    Apr 25, 2022 · In the sentence, The company experienced strong year[-]over[-]year growth., how does the Chicago Manual of Style govern the hyphenation? Part of me believes that it falls under the …