
homemade vs. handmade | WordReference Forums
Jan 9, 2011 · Well, "homemade" means "made at home" while "handmade" means made by hand, not by a machine. Many "homemade" items are also "handmade," because people who make things at …
homemade or home made or home-made - WordReference Forums
May 8, 2014 · homemade or home made or home-made Hello, I've found each of the spellings in the headline and I'm not sure if all of them are correct or there is one use more frequently than the …
Possessive - or not? Visitors, Visitor's or Visitors' guide {+ center ...
Jan 24, 2025 · The free event – which runs from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. – will see vendors set up throughout the provincial park's visitors' centre and across the west lawn selling a host of items including …
Treat someone to - WordReference Forums
Aug 1, 2019 · To treat someone (verb) can mean to pay for something so that they don’t have to. Or it can just mean to do something especially nice for someone; to give them a present or an experience …
Believe in/ believe on | WordReference Forums
May 2, 2017 · I've never seen "believe on" except in the KJV (Acts 16:31). I also have seen it on homemade billboards in rural Indiana and on bumper stickers like the one in #6, which refer to the …
Spaghetti alla chitarra | WordReference Forums
Jul 25, 2012 · Surely the point about "spaghetti alla chitarra" is not only that it's homemade but that it is made by stretching the pasta over a board, then cut to resemble the strings of a guitar. An important …
he's not vs. he hasn't/isn't | WordReference Forums
Apr 5, 2022 · He likes homemade food—but I'm sure he he's not/hasn't had any since he moved into this apartment. He's not/he isn't going anywhere anytime soon, so we have plenty of time to think of a …
"I've made..." or "I made..."? | WordReference Forums
May 12, 2017 · In the context we're given here, which is actually serving the homemade cakes for the person to eat, I'd go for the perfect tense in BE: I've made some cakes for you.
WordReference Forums
WordReference Forums
Gerund, infinitive: I like <cooking, to cook>.
Jun 18, 2006 · 1) I like to cook for my family you don't necessarily imply that you enojy the act of cooking per se (maybe you simply prefer homemade food to processed industrial food, that's why you choose …