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filled form or completed form | WordReference Forums
2015年5月4日 · Hello, my friends, I was wondering which expression is idiomatic or is there a better choice: 1) I will send you the completed form. 2) I will send you the filled form. Thoughts: My first choice is #2, but I don't consider it idiomatic. I forgot to …
I filled / fill <in, out> an application form. - WordReference Forums
2006年6月21日 · If there's a blank on the form, you fill the blank in. If you've filled all the blanks in, then you've filled the form in. And at this point, the form is filled out. "Filled in" indicates that the blanks have had things put in them. "Filled out" indicates that you've done everything that you need to do with regard to the form.
was filling / were filled / is filled | WordReference Forums
2016年10月27日 · The seminar was slowly filling with people by 7 pm. The streets were filled with many cars. The team is filled with newcomers.
Filled with or filled of? - WordReference Forums
2008年5月26日 · You want "filled with." For some reason we say "full of" but "filled with".I wonder whether that is why you were puzzled.
"Fill in the table" OR "Fill the table"? - WordReference Forums
2008年1月20日 · Hello, I gave an exercise to my students, but I have a question about the way I should formulate the instruction. Do you "fill" a table, or "fill it in"? Do you make a difference in English? Thank you!
Full of vrs. Filled with - WordReference Forums
2009年4月30日 · "That glass is filled with water." To me, personally, the first sentence means that you cannot fit any more water in the glass because it is full. The second one could imply that it is full, but it does not necessarily mean exactly that, to me.
Filled/completed - WordReference Forums
2016年1月12日 · I filled out a document. This document has to be sent by email. In my email, I say please find attached the completed document or please find attached the document filled. It's neither an application form nor a file. It's just a document with a few questions in it. I don't know which of my sentence is correct in this context. Could you please help?
filled with excitement/interest/enthusiasm - WordReference Forums
2016年12月9日 · Hello minaret, yes, it is possible to say all the "filled with" examples you give, but "filled with" is the result of some kind of action (the passive of a dynamic verb, a verb which conveys the sense of something happening) and in that sense, it is a participle (not an adjective); something "filled me", and therefore I was filled with something.
full of vs. filled with | WordReference Forums
2012年6月29日 · 'Filled' places more emphasis on the action, so is typically used when the container does not normally contain the substance. A balloon filled with water is a balloon that has water in it (unusually for a balloon) - we're not contrasting it with a half-full water-filled balloon, but with an ordinary air-filled or deflated balloon. We'd probably ...
filled with vs full of | WordReference Forums
2011年9月16日 · Hi, 1. a life full of hope 2. a life filled with hope Do you see any difference in meaning or nuance between the two? I, myself, feel (1) connotes a static situation that you cannot change whereas (2) shows one can relate to the situation and you are part of …