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The stream does not mark all of the boundaries of his property. To do that, the stream would have to be circular. The stream marks some of the boundaries of his property. In general the plural "boundaries" is more common than "boundary" to refer to the entire boundary line around a city, park, property, state, country, or any other bounded region.
The dictionary simply defines "to know no boundaries" as to have no limits. That's one of the reasons I thought it could work. Would you still use bounds instead of boundaries in these: - As air pollution knows no bounds/boundaries, the extent of the problem is far-reaching. - The reality of ski racing is that it ultimately knows no bounds ...
Hi, everyone: At Intel, we constantly push the boundaries of innovation in order to make people's lives more exciting, more fulfilling, and easier to manage. I wonder what does the red part mean in this context. more explanation: I know "push(back)the boundaries" means "discover something...
"Push the boundaries" means "push at" the boundaries. It means to attempt to expand boundaries, limits. That attempt may not succeed. It can also mean to succeed: to change the boundaries, by doing something no-one had been able to do before. Every project in every company "makes progress" and "moves forward" towards the goals of that project ...
This emphasises the stop instead of the city's boundaries. For an airplane, you possibly say "arrive at London" since the airport is a place, as mentioned above. But even where at is acceptable, you can still use in, so it applies to all cases.
"In" = within or inside the boundaries of At is a little vague but as general guidance: "At" = (i) for an open area, a monument or other solid object, or public building: directly outside [the entrance to]; next to; at the place [known as ...]; a the monument, at the library, the tree by the river; the crossroads, etc.
Yes, "In the park" and "At the park" are basically the same, if we're talking about a town park with grass and trees. If there's a difference, "in" implies within the boundaries of the park vs. being outside the boundaries, where "at" does not say anything about in vs. out. This would come up in the context of a baseball game, an "in the park ...
Did I use at and in in 6 and 7 correctly? (I think 'at' should be used when something or someone is in a large space without boundaries and 'in' should be used when sth or sb is inside sth with boundaries. Could you please explain the difference? I would be really thankful.
Which is the preposition used in this sentence? The shop is placed/situated right in/at the heart of the city. An additional question: which verb is better? place or situate? Thanks!!!
I’m interested in the place of “so far” in a sentence. I came across the sentences (a-1) and (b-1) below the other day. I guess (a-2) and (b-2) are also OK without any big changes in meaning. Am I correct? (a-1) The English language so far has spread out globally across national boundaries...
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