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- prepositions - Plays a role in or at doing something? - English . . .
If something or someone plays a part or plays a role in a situation, they are involved in it and have an effect on it They played a part in the life of their community
- Job title vs. job role - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
What is the difference between job title and job role? For example, from the Google documentation on rich snippets: title — The person's title (for example, Financial Manager) role — The perso
- Role or Roles - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
The role of the two parties involved in a legal proceeding, peculiar to the adversarial system of trial, can help circumscribe whether or not a trial proceeds in a fair and unbiased fashion
- meaning - What is the origin of the phrase play a part role . . .
The meaning of “role” in the sense of “part played by a person in life” derives from French roll (of paper) on which an actor's part is written, and dates back to c 1600
- Take the role vs. take over the role vs. take on the role
Did he "take the role" of his colleague or did he "take over the role" of his colleague? Also "take on the role" sounds like a viable option to me, because I'm trying more to convey the sense of him accepting a new challenge rather than simply taking possession of something that wasn't his
- etymology - Origin of idiom wearing the lt; role gt; hat? - English . . .
What is the origin of the idiom "wearing the < role > hat"? Here is an example from the post Getting things done when you wear multiple hats in PookieMD's Blog: I wear many hats, and I suppo
- Is someone granted a role said to be roled? Or rolled?
It's missing from other online dictionaries, such as Merriam-Webster At best, I'd say it was an extrapolated word, which is to say that if you used it, someone would understand that you combined the word "role" with the "-ed" ending to form an adjective Actors who are given roles are said to be "casted" as such and such a character, not "roled"
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