MSN: What is Camazotz in ‘Stranger Things’ season 5? ‘A Wrinkle in Time’ connection explained
What is Camazotz in ‘Stranger Things’ season 5? ‘A Wrinkle in Time’ connection explained
The Daily Item: RiverStage cast taps into deep emotions in 'A Wrinkle in Time'
If You Go What: RiverStage Community Theatre’s “A Wrinkle In Time.” When: Fridays and Saturdays at 7:30 p.m. and Sundays at 2:30 p.m. until Feb. 23 Where: GreenSpace Center, 815 Market St., Lewisburg ...
'Acceptable to' is not really used in this situation. 'Approved by' and 'accepted by' are both perfectly fine, although I think 'approved' is a more typical usage. As a side note, program and report are not proper nouns, so they should not be written with a capital letter.
According to the Wikipedia article entitled "Manual of Style (abbreviations)", N/A is the only one that is proper; however, according to the Wikipedia article entitled "n/a" ("Not applicable" redirects to "n/a"), all of the other forms are also acceptable.
I also add that in AmE it is acceptable to use friendly both as an adverb and as a noun. There may an example in which 'friendly' is an adverb, but ordinarily it is not an adverb. It is an adjective. In general the rule about the number of syllables predicts what English speakers say, but not always.
I have always treated it as a perfectly acceptable alternative past participle of the strong verb 'to earn', like learnt/dreamt,, etc. I agree that 'earnt' is more common in speech and 'earned' in writing, but it's not an absolute rule.
It's the lady from next door. What does she want? She wants to borrow the lawnmower. As you can see, we use 'it' twice to refer back to the 'someone' in the first statement. We don't switch to 'she' until the referent becomes 'the lady from next door'. In the conversation in the OP, 'She's' is acceptable, but 'It's' or 'That's' is more natural.