Found 255 articles starting with S: Page #0

Saccharin vs. Saccharine

Saccharin vs. Saccharine: Navigating Distinctions in Sweeteners Understanding the differences between "saccharin" and "saccharine" involves recognizing variations in terminology and usage. This article aims to clarify the distinctions bet...

sacrifice - correct spelling

noun and verb
Example: The children appreciate the sacrifice of their parents. noun
Example: ...

sacrilegious - correct spelling

adjective
Example: The bumper sticker was sacrilegious and offended many drivers....

safety - correct spelling

noun
Example: The child sought the safety of her mother’s arms....

sagacious - vocabulary

adjective
Able to discern and distinguish with wise perception; having a keen practical sense. What arouses the indignation of the honest satirist is not, unless the man is a prig, the fact that people ...

salacious, salutary

Woe to the person who confuses these two in the wrong situation.Salutary means “wholesome” or “designed to create a healthy improvement.”Salacious means “appealing to sexual desire.”...

salary - correct spelling

noun
Example: Though small, his salary put a roof over their heads and food on their plates....

salient - vocabulary

adjective
Conspicuous or prominent; projecting or pointing outward; springing, jumping. Has the art of politics no apparent utility? Does it appear to be unqualifiedly ratty, raffish, sordid, obscene, a...

salutary - vocabulary

adjective
Promoting or favorable to health, healthful; promoting some beneficial purpose, wholesome; designed to effect improvement. Columbus stood in his age as the pioneer of progress and enlightenmen...

Sample Page

This is an example page. It's different from a blog post because it will stay in one place and will show up in your site navigation (in most themes). Most people start with an About page that introduces them to potential site visitors. It might say s...

Sample Page - Build Your Vocabulary


Learn 406 words smart people should know. Ideal for those studying for college-entrance exam...

Sample Page - Common Grammatical Mistakes


This Grammar eBook explores common grammatical mistakes people make. ...

Sample Page - Developing a Powerful Writing Style

This Grammar eBook will teach you how to develop a powe...

Sample Page - Egg on Your Face


This Grammar eBook discusses the Top 25 Grammatical Mistakes. ...

Sample Page - Rules on Punctuation


This Grammar...

Sample Page - The Awful 'Like' Word


Download this free eBook. Send the file to all your contacts. The 'like' word threatens your car...

Sample Page - Understanding the Parts of Speech


This Grammar eBook explains all you need to know about the 8 ...

sanctimonious - vocabulary

adjective
Making an ostentatious display or hypocritical pretense of holiness, piety, or righteousness. Recently, I boarded a flight from Boston to New York. As I sat down, the attendant announced that ...

sandal - correct spelling

noun
Example: She slipped her sandals on her feet and went to the beach....

sandwich - correct spelling

noun and verb
Example: He fixed a ham sandwich for his lunch. noun
Example: We must ...

sanguine - vocabulary

adjective
Optimistic (and cheerfully so), hopeful, confident; reddish, ruddy.Note: Do not confuse sanguine with sanguinary. Sanguinary means “bloodthirsty” or “accomp...

sanguine, sanguinary

Sanguine might be one of the most misused words in the English language, and that is partly because it has two meanings that seem almost the opposite of each other.Sanguine means “reddish,” ...

sardonic - vocabulary

adjective
Scornfully or bitterly sarcastic, mocking, cynical, sneering. Freud, Jung thought, had been a great discoverer of facts about the mind, but far too inclined to leave the solid ground of “criti...

satellite - correct spelling

noun
Example: The spy satellite provided remarkably clear pictures of the camp....

satiate - vocabulary

verb
To satisfy fully the appetite or desire of; to satisfy to excess. I am no longer sure of anything. If I satiate my desires, I sin but I deliver myself from them; if I refuse to satisfy ...

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    Choose the sentence with correct use of the future continuous tense:
    A They will be studying for the exam all night.
    B He will ate dinner before the movie.
    C I will meet you at the cafe.
    D We will going to the beach tomorrow.

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