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- etymology - Oriented vs. orientated - English Language Usage . . .
As others have mentioned, the existence of the two forms oriented and orientated is one of the many differences that American English has from British English I have noticed this in American television programmes where American people have used the alternatives orient and oriented This has always stood out as different and odd to me Not only
- “Oriented” vs. “orientated” - English Language Usage Stack . . .
"Oriented" vs "orientated" (6 answers) Closed 11 years ago I couldn't help but add an additional frame
- grammar - What is the difference between oriented for and oriented . . .
Some say that "oriented towards" pertains to directional senses and "oriented for" describes purpose Others say only "oriented towards" is correct for both senses Could someone help me understand the difference? (Non-native speaker here ) For example, "Madeline has been oriented for towards some hospitality services besides her managerial
- How to hyphenate this phrase [duplicate] - English Language Usage . . .
[{solution and goal}-oriented] person This method fails because the hyphens do not show the structure of your concepts clearly They obscure it If you write solution and goal-oriented person you associate solution with person as if it were an adjective, which it is not At best you imply that you are a solution person and a goal-oriented person
- Is there a specific word to describe a long-term–oriented person?
Who, in all his or her dealings, values the long-term value over the short-term one The best I have come up with is quot;long-term–oriented quot; Is there a dedicated (less clumsy) adjective to
- hyphenation - object-oriented vs object oriented - English Language . . .
Here object-oriented is a single unit that describes (adjectivally) code If these two words are simply part of the clause, ie, a predicative adjective, they don't need hyphenating Think of it this way "what is this software like?" - "This software is object oriented " In other words, "This software is oriented in an object way!"
- oriented on (a subject) - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
The word "oriented" isn't completely dissociated from its non-metaphorical meaning for me, so using on evokes a mixed metaphor If you wanted to say that you learned a lot about the game of chess, people don't say: "I dived deep about the game of chess"
- Which word fits better in this case: focused, aimed or oriented?
None of these examples strike me as valid All choices of verb are acceptable, and I see no reason to favour one over another But they should be, for example, is focussed on finding, aims at finding, is oriented towards finding –
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