What is the difference between setting and sitting




















The words seating and sitting are often confused by writers. We'll help you to understand the difference. Sitting means resting with the body supported by buttocks and thighs or being located upon when used as a verb.

Seating means the provision of chairs or other places for people to sit when used as a noun. Seating is also used as a verb. It means to cause to sit down, to usher to a seat. Out of the two words, 'sitting' is the most common. It appears about 14 times more frequently than 'seating'. It's easy to confuse words with similar sounds and spellings, especially when they are close in definition. Sitting is a verb that means "resting in a seated position, located or situated upon. Seating can be used as a noun that refers to "the act of placing people in seats or all the seats in a theater or auditorium.

The right expression is 'roomy brick edifice seating'. These phrases are often confused by writers. The correct expression is 'airlines furnish seating charts'. Some synonyms of seating are: servicing, seating room, seat area, ushering, escorting.

I am a copywriter and copyeditor. I blog on writing and social media tips mostly, but I sometimes throw in my thoughts about running a small business. Follow me on Twitter at hotpepper. Previous Post. Next Post. Skip to content This is part of the difference between series.

Setting Seating refers to an action being done to something. Want to improve your English in five minutes a day? Get a subscription and start receiving our writing tips and exercises daily! It took a couple of exposures for me to understand that this was a legitimate construction in British English.

I mean it as a compliment. My question involves two question marks, the position of the one above and the one for my questions below.

Of course, the educational level of that rural county is not very high, yet that usage was so widespread as to make you wonder. Good to be back. Alice—Language is an extremely personal thing. I think we all feel more comfortable, more ourselves with one type of speech rather than another. I love regional dialect. My favorite new commercial is the Dish ad with the guys using an iPad.

I love hearing them talk. That being said, I feel strongly that education should produce citizens who are fluent in a standard form of English and know when to use it. I feel strongly that education should produce citizens who are fluent in a standard form of English and know when to use it. Holeheartily agree, LOL. I think we need to be careful to distinguish regionalisms and dialect from flat-out wrong usage.

Xrta in agreeance with that! Miles, Ed Good beat you to it. Mea culpa.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000