One is not necessarily correct over the others... - member's area = an area of a member, belonging to a member - members' area = an area of members, belonging to more than one member - members area = an area for members That is exactly the problem I have been having so far.
I often see people use the word 'faculty' to refer to a faculty member. I have seen this used by Americans also. Are 'faculty' and 'faculty member' both mean the same?
I member of board (s) in senso stretto in italiano sarebbero i consiglieri intesi come i componenti del consiglio di amministrazione. La parola dirigente è più indefinita inItaliano, anche se copre un'area più ristretta e più spostata verso l'alto livello rispetto al termine inglese manager.
Thus, a founding member would be one of the charter members, but a charter member would not necessarily be one of the founders. Google founder member and you will see it used in many places.
Hi all, :confused: "XXX is Royal Academician (i.e. member of the Royal Academy, according to Wikipedia) and a fellow of the Royal Society of Arts" We are talking about the London Royal Academy and Royal Society of Arts, two truly British Institutions. I would like to properly understand the...
Hello everyone, I've been looking for a word to say 'member who has been in a group (Supreme Court, organization, order, etc) the longest time.' In Portuguese there is such a word, but I'm really not sure if it exists in English for all cases mentioned above. My question: What word or...