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氧化铁薄膜



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  • the meaning of sull in this sentence: He’s been in a sull
    sull noun (rare) a sulky fit, a ‘sulk’ 1972 E Welty Optimist's Daughter ii iv 97 He's been in a sull ever since you married Judge McKelva and didn't send him a special engraved invitation to the wedding Eudora Welty was an accomplished author, and this is an example of using a verb as a noun Maybe it's something she heard in real life
  • Use of capitals and full stops in bullet points [duplicate]
    Possible Duplicate: Capitalization for a bullet list Let's say I have a bullet point list e g: Point 1 Point 2 Point 3 Notice I have put a capital letter for the starting letter of every b
  • Origin of “give a damn about” - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    As explained in the following post “give a damn”, though used mainly in the negative form (don’t give a damn), when used in affirmative sentences, suggests that you care about something someone In a
  • Placement of acronym vs words spelled out [duplicate]
    I am confused whether to place the acronym before or after the words are spelled out For example, the first time this organisation is mentioned, which of these alternatives is more correct: The
  • writing - Footnote marks at end of a sentence - English Language . . .
    Both are valid ways to place a footnote reference, but they mean slightly different things If you want the footnote reference to belong to the entire sentence, then the second method is correct However, if you want the footnote to apply only to the word text, then the first is correct
  • Free of vs. Free from - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    I checked Garner's Modern American Usage; although BG doesn't address free of vs free from, he writes that the distinction between freedom of and freedom from is that the former indicates the "possession of a right" (freedom of speech) and the latter "protection from a wrong" (freedom from oppression) So free from is used to indicate protection from something problematic, and free of (which
  • Which is correct: troubleshooted or troubleshot?
    Troubleshooted is not a word, but troubleshot is Is this really the correct word to use? I always feel like saying: I troubleshooted it vs I troubleshot it For some reason, it just doesn't
  • How did pissed come to mean drunk or angry?
    I should probably point out that the "drunk" sense is primarily UK; in the USA, the "angry" sense predominates No doubt it has something to do with urination, somehow, as does piss off in the imperative (another primarily UK usage; in the USA, the phrasal verb is mostly used in the angry sense, as a participle)
  • What does thy mean? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    I read a sentence containing the word thy, but I cannot find the meaning of that word Is it older English, or is it still used in contemporary English today?
  • raw notes VS rough notes [closed] - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    I was wondering what's the right word to use when speaking about notes that are not polished: "rough notes" or "raw notes"? Are both valid? Does one of them sound more "nat





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