Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
In everyday English of course leadership is a neutral thing.
The idea is to give the student a practical base for understanding and speaking everyday English.
The apostrophe has much to answer for here, as it does in everyday English.
Racist and homophobic terms are used by some students as everyday English.
But over the last few years a stream of everyday English words has stormed through the language barrier.
Thus nuclear takes on a more familiar sound pattern, similar to everyday English words like circular and muscular.
In everyday English, "berry" is a term for any small edible fruit.
Some scientists have been trained to translate technical nomenclature into everyday English.
Of course, they'll be written in everyday English on the pills, medicine or ointment the pharmacist gives you.
Though singular they is widespread in everyday English and has a long history of usage, debate continues about its acceptability.
Never use a foreign phrase, a scientific word or a jargon word if you can think of an everyday English equivalent.
Carpenter is a proponent of the theory that feudalism was fundamentally important to everyday English society and politics after 1166.
Be careful about dropping Latin into everyday English.
"These translations by design suppress a huge amount of technical machinery that underlies the everyday English description," he said.
Most modern translators try to keep Ibsen's text close to everyday English and the spirit, if not the word, of the original.
The computer, using a dictionary of stenographic terms, then translates the reporter's cryptic shorthand into everyday English.
There are two types of diacritics that have become part of everyday English: the dot and the apostrophe.
"Try to be practical; use everyday English," he said, then paused, "to think of the right legal phrase" to describe another principle illustrated by this case.
There is a mock military hierarchy in the field of riders, and a lexicon that has been greedily harvested by everyday English.
There are terms which have no equivalent in everyday English, but without which certain generalisations about English just cannot be made.
It's not everyday English.
When spoken in everyday English, a fraction describes how many parts of a certain size there are, for example, one-half, eight-fifths, three-quarters.
I could have stood there on the hillside and quoted the whole of Mark Antony's speech in modern everyday English from beginning to end.
Put into everyday English, it says: 'Meryt-Amen: I am waiting here for my uncle.
Everyday English - This section focuses on areas where meaning is internationally understood but pronunciation is often faulty.