Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. In "the key to understanding the problem", the part after to is a noun phrase, not a verb phrase. To is a preposition there. In "the key to unlock the door", to is part of the infinitive; of course you can call it a verb phrase if you must, but that's unnecessarily misleading. It looks like you opted for the term only to have a convenient (but ...

  2. As you note, "key" can be either a noun or an adjective. If you use "key" before a noun, it is usually understood to be an adjective. "Honesty is the key attribute that we are looking for." "Attribute" is a noun. "Key" is modifying this noun. If "key" is used without a noun to modify, it is usually a noun. "The key to the door is in the drawer."

  3. Feb 9, 2011 · 6. A legend is a caption, a title or brief explanation appended to an article, illustration, cartoon, or poster. A key is an explanatory list of symbols used in a map, table, etc. Legend is more generic, while key is more specific. Neither word implicates anything about the location of the text/list. Share.

  4. Hence: the key to/for the door. the switch to/for the hall lights. the catch to/for the window. On the other hand, 'of' is used more when you're naming a component part of something; sometimes either 'of' or 'to/for' is possible, depending on whether you're just naming a part of something or implying its intended use: the leg of the table.

  5. Apr 26, 2020 · 2. An answer key is a key to the answers (to a test or exercise). It's usually a copy of the test or exercise with the instructor's idea of the best possible answers written in. A key answer is an answer that is key. That is, it's the most important of several possible answers to a question. Alternatively, it could be the answer to a question ...

  6. Oct 1, 2017 · If you have one key, then it should be answer key. However, when you have a set of keys, and you are referring to the set, rather than individual keys, you should refer to answer-keys. You need to differentiate between references to the set, and references to individual members of a set.

  7. Wikipedia calls this Keysmash and says "alternatively 'key smash' or 'keyboard smash'". It refers not just to the mechanical act of pressing the keys, but also the writer's intent to express emotion in their communication.

  8. @Andy Your comment is perfectly valid, and would be even better if we were looking for an opposite instead of wondering why language is the way it is, or dealing with keys (OP's question uses buttons, which may stay depressed or otherwise), or posted on this thread almost 10 years ago, or posted on one of the many programming sites.

  9. I think the key sense of provision here is that it represents the action or an act of providing, preparing, or arranging in advance (OED's definition). To me, it's almost incidental that a legal provision is likely to be expressed in the form of a requirement.

  10. Feb 2, 2011 · As an additional note, in the Portable Character Set, both symbolic names (<slash>, <solidus>) share the same glyph "/" (UCS: <U002F>) with the same description: SOLIDUS. -- from: The Open Group Base Specifications Issue 7, 2018 edition - 6.1 Portable Character Set -- and from what I know, JSON per JSON.org describes the character as SOLIDUS (w/o caps).

  1. People also search for