Did i use the word initiate right The main distinction between to start and to initiate is that you initiate, the first/initial time Could you tell me the meaning of the text in red, in either illustrative or. Hello, i would use 'has initiated' in this sentence, as the work was started and is still going on. Note that as there is neither possession nor contraction here, the apostrophe is incorrect As to which word works best, it depends on the effect the writer is aiming for
All are possible, but some sound more aggressive. Someone new to a field or activity Beginner, novice, tiro, tyro hi, suppose i just set up an account on this forum Can i greet the members with hi, i'm an initiate here An initiate (noun) is someone who has been initiated Often the sense is of recent initiation and therefore the initiate is a beginner
I don't think this carries the same sense of beginner. Your links don't mention initiate at all, and the second one doesn't use bring. the first link talks about bringing a lawsuit in state court as opposed to in federal court. (bringing a lawsuit / in state court, two separate phrases.) neither says anything about bringing a lawsuit in court or initiating a lawsuit in court. context is everything. I feel it should have been initiate rather than instigate in your sentence 1 in the op, but you seem to have quoted it correctly. Sorry it's a typo mistake, i was trying to say It's my pleasure to initiate contact with you Can i know why i cant use initiate a contact since contact is plural
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