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Why is the task of maintaining spelled maintenance and not maintainance? other words related to maintaining include However, what if you are referring to a list of a few numbers, some large and some small. Maintain, maintained, maintainer, maintainability, and maintainable.
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How do we use it correctly So we often get the general advice that we should spell out small numbers and use numerals for large numbers I found a similar thread here but i don't understand much.
However, i have always used preventati.
Capitalization would also be used in situations where e.g A contract leads of with the department shall refer to the widget maintenance department of acme corporation In such a case, when department is capitalized it would always refer to that particular department, even in contexts that were talking about other departments. They can be coupled together or with other terms, as in instruction manual or reference guide
In addition, there are a number of similar terms like handbook, guidebook, primer, or vade mecum Manual refers specifically to a reference document which provides detailed information about operation and maintenance of a product. As you say, it doesn't make a lot of sense as an article, and many americans currently spell it ahold in this idiom This ngram compares take a hold and take ahold
Take a hold shows up around 1780, while take hold was around for two centuries before that (shakespeare used it), and dwarfs both lines on this ngram.
Except non is not an english word, it is a prefix of latin origin Which is why american style manuals will always ask you to merge it with the subsequent word, without a hyphen In any case, an isolated non is definitely wrong, in any flavo [u]r of the english language. What are the rules in english language to split words at the end of a line
Where exactly must the hyphen split the word? If water, electricity, gas and similar services can be called utilities, could rubbish collection and/or disposal be a part of this grouping?