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Discover LudwigThe phrase "singular word" is correct and commonly used in written English.
It is typically used to refer to a single, individual word in a sentence or phrase. For example: - Can you please define this singular word in the sentence for me? - The poet used a singular word to convey a complex emotion in just a few syllables. - She repeated the singular word over and over again until it lost all meaning.
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The singular word pajama (the British spelling is pyjama) serves as an adjective (pajama party), and the plural pajamas is a noun.
Can they render complex ideas, such as a person who wears gloves to throw snowballs (Handschuhschneeballwerfer) or a man who pees sitting down (Sitzpinkler) in one deliciously singular word?
They noted that when Jesus used the Trinitarian formula in Matthew 28 19 he used the singular word name rather than the plural names.
Zen condenses "no-thought and no-image" into a singular word "no" in keeping with its proclivity to favor the simple, as this contraction allows Zen to expand the scope and the meaning of "no-thought and no-image".
And, when I learned it, I thought it was pretty cool that all my identities could be expressed with a singular word, so I began asking my friends at school what they considered themselves, preparing myself to proudly say I was Jewish after they had answered with their singular ethnic-national-racial-religious identity.
We all know that to make a regular singular word into a possessive, you just add apostrophe and S: the state's legislators.
Similar(51)
His voice carries its special mix of ordinary colloquial phrasing ("God knows... ain't... I mean... ..) and singular word-play ("inklings... inkles").
"Names that are singular words, Cloudy, Clear, Path, SideCar, are obvious technology startups.
Point your telephone at specific books and the application will utilize AI to interpret singular words on the page to sign language based communication performed by a symbol.
As in a document words can have variants such as plural, singular, words with suffixes, etc., which should not change its semantic representation, we use a conflation technique [20] to merge the words that have lexical variations to a single word.
The transcript then used singular words to describe the noises, including "scream," "gasping," "saw," and "cutting".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com