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  1. Computers: what is the difference between load and loading?

    Jul 28, 2015 · The noun version of loading can be the abstract as commented above, but because it tends to refer to a process rather than an event, it is also natural and common to use it in …

  2. Is there a difference between "load" and "upload"?

    Load ing is the process the application performs when it opens a file. Depending on the application and the file, aspects of the loading process could include: Rendering appropriate …

  3. Is (being) loaded - English Language Learners Stack Exchange

    Jul 24, 2020 · "Being loaded" is the form for present progressive, so it is more correct. The word "as" tells us that the action of loading begins before the man started to speak, and will …

  4. Which is correct: "have been completed" or "are completed"

    The requested modifications have been completed. is better, because you are referring to a continuing action (you finished writing the code, but it will get tested next). Put into context: …

  5. "Are you working today" or "Do you work today?"

    Oct 22, 2024 · " Are you working today? " is a specific question about this day - not this day of the week, but this exact day. For example, it might be a Wednesday, and you know the other …

  6. british english - What is the right word to refer to a black person ...

    Excuse my ignorance, I have lived in the UK for 8 years however I still don't know how to refer to a black person, as I came from a country where racism was not an issue. Some agency called …

  7. I 'was' or I 'were'? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange

    Feb 14, 2019 · From other's conversation,I found out they mentioned I was and sometimes they also mentioned I were. Is there any rules for I was/were?

  8. "load of something" vs "loads of something" -? Difference

    Jun 28, 2024 · For use in this sense, infml much or many as defined in Cambridge Dictionary, the OP’s quoted examples work too with their respective alternative phrases: There's [a load of] …

  9. A: Has she ever been in a coma? B: Yes, she has, for two years

    Jun 13, 2025 · OP, when you ask Shouldn’t it work the same way in this case — “She’s been in a coma for three years”? are you still intending that revised form of the utterance to be a …

  10. What is the difference between "I did" and "I have done"

    Apr 20, 2016 · I am always confused about when to use "I did something..." and when to use "I have done something..." Please kindly explain and provide some examples.