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  1. Difference between "assist in" and "assist with"

    We assisted him in the whole procedure. assist someone with someone or something - to help someone manage someone or something, especially with lifting or physical management.

  2. Assist vs Support - English Language Learners Stack Exchange

    Feb 25, 2020 · The two verbs overlap. In many contexts, either would be suitable. In others, one or the other may sound more natural. For example, here support is more idiomatic. She supported her …

  3. Why w/ and not w.? - English Language Learners Stack Exchange

    Mar 30, 2025 · I know that w/i and w/o are abbreviations for “within” and “without,” respectively, and it would not be typical of English style to abbreviate them w/o the slashes, so maybe that pattern …

  4. phrase choice - English Language Learners Stack Exchange

    Which is correct Robotic assisted laparoscopic hysterectomy; or Robotic-assisted laparoscopic hysterectomy. Similarly also for, Robotic assisted medial and lateral meniscus repair; or Robotic-assis...

  5. "If" vs. "If and When" — Any Differences? - English Language Learners ...

    Aug 16, 2025 · It is uncertain whether she will ever need assisted dying, but if the law is passed, she will have a choice. (future, uncertainty sense). The examples from Oxford and Cambridge dictionaries …

  6. word request - How to refer to vibe coding more formally? - English ...

    Mar 27, 2025 · @JeffZeitlin "AI-assisted" coding is when I write the code and occasionally ask an LLM to write some boilerplate or assist with a fix. "Vibe coding"'s key distinction is that you're not writing any …

  7. Difference between being at/of/in someone's service

    Jun 28, 2017 · To be in (someone's) service means that you are employed by that person in some kind of service role. To be of service (to someone) means that you have assisted or will assist them in …

  8. word choice - "ask for assist" or "ask for assistance"? - English ...

    Jun 24, 2018 · What is the proper/better wording? ask for assist ask for assistance I always thought the later (ask for assistance) until seeing someone using "ask for assist" on some SE site, and before edit...

  9. help on / with something - English Language Learners Stack Exchange

    Aug 11, 2015 · Looking at n-grams, it seems that before 1910 "help on" was standard, and since then "help with" has rapidly become a lot more common. There seems to be almost no difference in usage …

  10. "Could you please help me" vs "Could you help me please"

    Feb 28, 2014 · When asking for something politely which sentence is a better/proper choice? Could you please help me? or Could you help me please?