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?
Hi! I have a doubt: i want to say in my cv that i've been part of several associations... which of the two expressions should i use? Membership in various associations or Membership to various associations? Any tip is welcomed! Thanks!
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.
It would depend on what you meant. If the group has existed for ten years, I would say (parallel to Agró's examples) that it is "a group that has ten years of experience". If the group is composed of members who collectively individually have ten years of experience I would say "a group whose members have an average of (or collectively have) ten years experience. The sentences would be parsed ...
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