
member's/members'/members area | WordReference Forums
Sep 13, 2010 · Members' is correct as member's would mean that there is only one member. Also, re the correctness or otherwise of your third option, you might want to read this recent thread.
all members of the staff - WordReference Forums
Apr 15, 2019 · all of the staff members all of the members of the staff all staff members all members of the staff I wrote the 4th sentence and Duolingo (a language learning tool) marked it as wrong. That …
Notable members | WordReference Forums
View the profiles of notable members in the WordReference Forums community.
faculty or faculty member - WordReference Forums
Sep 29, 2011 · I often see people use the word 'faculty' to refer to a faculty member. I have seen this used by Americans also. Are 'faculty' and 'faculty member' both mean the same?
members present vs present members | WordReference Forums
Jan 13, 2023 · I’m wondering how far the grammatical principle of word order seen in “present” stretches. “Present members” means those who have the membership of the group whereas …
Norwegian: endearing terms for all family members
Jul 2, 2014 · Hello! I need your help. I'm looking for Norwegian terms of endearment commonly used among family members. Mother to son: Mother to daughter: Father...
five staff vs five members of staff - WordReference Forums
Jun 27, 2019 · Hi all, I've once been told that "five staff" is BrE and is considered wrong in AmE. American English speakers say "five members of staff" instead. Is there any truth to this? e.g. Five …
All respected staff members [sentence or phrase]
Oct 31, 2021 · All respected staff members. But this clearly means All of them were respected staff members. The full stop doesn't help anything in Roy's context: All respected staff members. This is to …
denotations of family members - WordReference Forums
Mar 17, 2020 · Is there a word describing denotations of family relatives? Namely the word group 'father' 'mother' 'aunt' 'uncle' 'brother', etc. Is there a specific word for this word group, or must one use …
My family consists of four members vs I have four members in my …
Aug 24, 2011 · I'm wondering which sentence sound more native in America, when describing your family. Both can be correct but have different use, ie colloquial vs. formal but I want to know which …