I thought this thread was settled five years ago, but: As I found myself doing when I worked for a short stretch in the UK, ex-pats often pick up European usage. label /ˈleɪbl/ verb (labels, labelling, labelled; US labels, labeling, labeled) 1 attach a label to. 2 assign to a category, especially inaccurately. 3 Biology & Chemistry make (a substance, cell, etc.) identifiable using a label ...
@gengo I see "mention" as the main verb and "be" as an auxiliary verb in "it can also be mentioned". Am I wrong? I'm not that good at labeling grammatical parts, so I can't be sure. Maybe I'm the one who is wrong.
There's a whole lot of difference between the two; Not knowing something and rejecting it or labeling it. Worth noting we are dealing with slang words, the name speaks for itself.
Hola, Lautaro. Just a problem in terminology (= labeling of tenses). Hope you don't mind. "We have been receiving", definitely. The construction is just like that of the present perfect: Verb to have + past participle (third column) but a gerund present participle is added. In the other case you are using two gerunds present participles. GS
But I wouldn't rely on instinct or intuition to start labeling things as "incorrect," certainly not in a grammar forum, and certainly not when it comes to prepositions. After all, a native speaker said "no" to the use of " at the parking lot," while another native speaker disagreed.
One of the earliest animals to be domesticated for agricultural purposes, sheep are raised for fleeces, meat (lamb, hogget, or mutton), and sheep milk. A sheep's wool is the most widely used animal fiber, and is usually harvested by shearing.