The confusion may come from 'forte' as used in music for strong or loud, which is definitely pronounced 'for tay' = /ˈfɔr teɪ/ The not in the first clause scopes the second one too, so you don't need to repeat the negative in it
In french, the same letters are. The other two are overnegated I agree the original should be 'hold the fort' and 'hold down…' looks like an aberration
This question was asked in a job interview!the difference is no one ever says hold the forth
Having said that, here is the most common reason questions are closed (unanswered) on this.
39 stodart's patent application describes his [i]nvention of a new sort. What is the correct way to pronounce niche I've always said and heard nitch, but now i hear neesh, but it always sounds trendy to me Back and forth is the more correct idiom, because, well, that's the idiom
There's nothing to stop you from saying forth and back — a little voice is repeating the subtitle to the. In the example you cite, to and fro is essentially identical in meaning to back and forth However, to and fro can also carry the less specific sense of ‘moving about in different. Playing shooting games are/is my forte
Do we use is or are for these sentences? Proclivity is 'leaning to', propensity is 'nearness to' and predilection is 'preference for' Worry about something more significant like the misuse. The last sentence is ok
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