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Advise versus advice
Message
 
 
À
03/02/2006 16:54:29
Information générale
Forum:
Politics
Catégorie:
Autre
Divers
Thread ID:
01093309
Message ID:
01093736
Vues:
15
>>Hi everybody,
>>
>>The word "advice" is a noun, while "advise" is a verb. However, I see lots of messages, even from the native speakers, where "advise" is used as a noun. I'm wondering, what other examples for "c" in a noun and "s" in a verb exist?
>>
>
>You've got the answer on your question, but since you asked an English question, I thought I'd point out that the second word in the thread title should be "versus." That's the word that's used, for example, in court proceedings: Kramer versus Kramer. It's generally abbreviated "vs."
>
>"Versa" by itself isn't a word in English. It is part of the expression "vice versa" (which is what I thought you were actually asking about from the title), which means "with the order reversed."
>
>Tamar

Thanks a lot. I was thinking of both when I created the thread, and finally choose the wrong one. Hopefully now it's better <g>
If it's not broken, fix it until it is.


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