Hello everyone, Does "compensate" meaning "to replace or balance the effect of something bad" (Longman) sound natural/correct in the examples I made below in everyday conversation? a. His inexperience is compensated by his determination to win. I mean, he doesn't have much experience, but he...
- The change will be effective April 22. 2. The change will be effective on April 22. 3. The change will be effective from April 22. 4. The change will be effective as of April 22. 5. The change will take effect April 22. 6. The change will take effect on April 22. 7. The change will take...
Your sentences are incorrect. You can say: Does it affect me? Does it have an effect on me? Your question is too wide. I think you have to decide whether you want to talk about the two nouns or the two verbs. Instead of us inventing examples, it would be easir for you to find real-life examples and then ask us questions about them. Otherwise we are simply writing an essay for you to read. You ...
Does it effect me? vs. Does it affect me? - WordReference Forums
The meaning is "in effect, by doing all these things, they will have become members of the Congolese people", or they will effectively have become Congolese people themselves.
Member Chinese #1 Is there any word or phrase to describe the effect of "one plus one more than two (if not equals two, as we ordinarily think), " which means "very effective" or "out-perform" as to perform more than what the ordinary people could perceive? Like in the example of a software which has encompassed various functions so that the user would feel very powerful of it ...