the -ous is an adjective form - sm
Posted By: maybe this will help on 2006-02-10
In Reply to: callus, callous - Stefanie
like mucus and mucous. if you are only addressing mucus, it is m-u-c-u-s. if you use it as an adjective (to describe the noun following it), then it is m-u-c-o-u-s, i.e., mucous membranes.
same for callus.
Complete Discussion Below: marks the location of current message within thread
- callus, callous - Stefanie
- the -ous is an adjective form - sm - maybe this will help
The messages you are viewing
are archived/old. To view latest messages and participate in discussions, select
the boards given in left menu
Other related messages found in our database
Form doesn't matter. I just do
it all is the usual format, headings capped and then just type. I make paragraphs if needed. Be sure and check for grammar (see your original post) because bad grammar will surely count against you, probably even more than a blank will. Just do the best you can with what you have to work with. If you don't pass it will at least have given you some experience and you have an idea of what to expect on the next one.
A template is like a "master form" you use over & over
and fill in the blanks. You don't change the template each time, it stays the same, you are essentially making a copy of the template and changing the copy. The copy is just a document, not a template.
BOS is moving away from the hyphenated form so followup is the
s
|