Man/woman who cannot produce children: infertile?
A woman who is unable to produce children is called a barren woman. That was my first thought too, but I suspect is sounds old fashioned. (And women may be unfairly
A woman who is unable to produce children is called a barren woman. That was my first thought too, but I suspect is sounds old fashioned. (And women may be unfairly
Which is correct: "farm produce" or "farm products"? When to use "produce" as a noun, when to use "product"?
Hi everyone! I''m writing on behalf of my student who is sure the collocation "to produce a report" is a correct one - whereas to me it doesn''t sound right. We need a phrase to
Can anyone please explain to me the meaning and the difference between ''produce of'' and ''produced in'' in the context of a product label. Thanks in advance
However, in (2) the shift in tense in the first verb (from "will" to "would") may produce a shift in tense in the second verb, depending on whether the mood is indicative or
In other cases the ''report'' itself is a process or investigation and ''do'' might sound apposite (This idea of ''process'' is also why students ''do'' (or ''take'') exams) In your case ''do''
Produce, pronounced PRO-duce. WordReference Random House Learner''s Dictionary of American English: produce: n. 8. agricultural products thought of as a group, esp.
Hi,there In my last thread here, I use a phrase llike "product line" in my sentence which is with regard to the car factory,and one of the replier replace it with "production line". To
Produce = make or manufacture from components or raw materials. (of a region, country, or process) yield, grow, or supply: the California vineyards produce excellent wines.
PDF version includes complete article with source references. Suitable for printing and offline reading.