Wednesday, 31 January 2018

Difference between ' Everyone' and 'Everybody'

The meaning is almost identical; but not exactly. "Everybody" is often used as a collective, i.e. it describes the whole group of people in question as one unit.

"I met everybody" would therefore be (a little more) correct in a situation where the speaker has met the whole group at the same time (at a party, say).

"Everyone" refers to the members of the group in question as seperate individuals.

"I met everyone" could imply that, over the course of a few days or weeks the speaker has managed to meet every single individual of the group.

#Englishtrivia

Solving Maths - 1st February 2018

Based on the information presented, we can safely infer that the difference between J and r is $60.00 given that s amount would be constant.

Hence from the second part we can make the relationship that :-

3 Units - $60.00
1 Unit - $20.00

So J donated $80.00
R donated $ 20.00
S donated $ 30.00

#Solvingmathsisfun




Tips on Comprehension - 1st February 2018



Since passages are drawn from many different disciplines there is a possibility that you may not be familiar with the material presented.

Do not be discouraged if you encounter unfamiliar material, words, phrases, characters, events etc

Questions are to be answered on the basis of the information provided in the passage, and you are not expected to rely on outside knowledge of a particular topic.

Understanding the content in a passage is without a doubt critical but having the ability to tackle the question gets you the mark.

Hence even if your understanding of a given passage is less than 90%, it does not ultimately mean you cant score well for this section.

#answeringexamtips