Three hundred forty-five thousand, two hundred thirty-four and fifteen thousandths.
Three hundred forty five. (Note that there is no "u" in "forty.")
Tires are referred to as tyres in the United Kingdom because that is the proper spelling on the word in the proper English language. American English often has misspellings of proper words.
This is a QUESTION and answer website so if you want to ask a question, you must use proper English (or whichever language you're using) to ask your question with.
In English every Q must have its U ( Scrabble editors notwithstanding ). Except for some proper nouns like Iraq, foreign words using the Q alone are not naturalized English words, even when they achieve some currency, and should be written in Italics.
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English has a strong tradition of borrowing words that it can use. Those similar words are Arabic; English just happens to be using them as well.
paan chord
Name of the elements are represented by symbols. These symbols are short english words.
Re: the term for a contradiction of words, you are probably thinking of 'oxymoron.'
It depends on what you mean by the made-up word "baddest" - what exactly do you mean by that word? Are you asking for the worst words - and how are they bad? Please ask the question again using proper English so we know what you mean.
In English writing, it is common to capitalize Latin words if they are used as proper nouns (e.g., names of specific entities) or titles. However, if Latin words are used in a general sense, they are typically not capitalized. It is important to follow the specific style guide or convention you are using for consistency.
No, "Is what" is not a complete sentence in proper English. It is grammatically incorrect and lacks subject-verb agreement. It needs additional context or words to form a complete and coherent sentence.