
If you send an email that you already sent, can you say you …
Oct 29, 2013 · I resent my email. I resent my mother. I resent my email to my mother. Odd, isn't it?
meaning - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
Aug 18, 2014 · Additionally, Dictionary.com specifically offers "to envy or resent the pleasure or good fortune of (someone)". Sounds rather spot on.
The ambiguity of: "resent your message" - English Language
Mar 22, 2018 · Compare this to other cases in which "to resent" could be grammatically correct: I resent your message. This is ambiguous between the two options: The present tense of "to …
What's the difference between envy and resent? [closed]
Jun 30, 2021 · What's the difference between envy and resent? envy painful or resentful awareness of an advantage enjoyed by another joined with a desire to possess the same …
Does "more recently" just mean "recently" here?
Jun 26, 2020 · more recently = later than the 1960s (in a context where there's some meaningful connection between all three of the 1960s, that later time, and now / time of utterance. Without …
word usage - Difference between "grudge" and "resentment"
Sep 7, 2016 · We resent things all the time, but generally let them go; if we hold onto the offense and our reaction to it, then we are holding a grudge.
Simple Past vs. Present Perfect: "was" vs. "has been"
Jul 1, 2012 · Possible Duplicate: “Did it close” vs “Has it closed”? As a English non-native speaker it is difficult for me to understand when I must use present perfect or past simple
Regarding Re: ; what is the correct usage in an email subject line?
I want to know what is the recommended way to use Re: in the subject line of an email. I use Re: in the subject line as a shortform of 'in regards to'. Whenever I have used Re:, people have …
Word for not recent but not too old
Aug 4, 2019 · I’m needing a descriptive word that describes both not recent” and “not old” - essentially the latter. However, I am not wanting to describe a living thing such a person or …
Using "present perfect" for things that happen in future
Oct 26, 2012 · Is it grammatical to use "Present Perfect" tense for something that is going to happen in future? As far as I know, the Present Perfect is used to say that an action happened …