Favor and favour are two spellings of the same noun or verb. The spelling depends on the type of English.
- In American English, you use “favor.”
- In British English, you use “favour.”
Canadian English mainly follows British English guidelines, so favour is the correct spelling.
The same distinction applies to similar words, such as “honor or honour,” “labor or labour,” “favorite or favourite,” “behavior or behaviour,” “color or colour,” and “humor or humour.”
It’s important to choose one type of English and use it consistently. The QuillBot Grammar Checker can help you with this.
Continue reading: Is it favor or favour in Canada?
The phrase “kindly advise” uses the verb, “advise.” You only use “advice” when the noun is required.
“Kindly advise” can be viewed as overly formal in some situations. You can use QuillBot’s AI Humanizer to adjust the formality of your language for the context.
Continue reading: Is it kindly advise or advice?
The phrase “doctor’s advice” uses the noun, “advice.” You only use “advise” when the verb is required.
Continue reading: Is it doctor’s advice or advise?
The phrase “any advice” uses the noun, “advice.” You only use “advise” when the verb is required.
Continue reading: Is it any advice or any advise?
Defence and defense are two spellings of the same noun. The spelling depends on the type of English.
- In American English, “defense” is most common, so self-defense is correct.
- In British English, “defence” is standard, so self-defence is correct.
In both cases, also make sure to hyphenate the term.
The same distinction applies to similar words, such as offence or offense, licence or license, and pretence or pretense. It’s important to choose one spelling and use it consistently. The QuillBot Grammar Checker can help you with this.
Continue reading: Is it self-defense or self-defence?
Defence and defense are two spellings of the same noun. The spelling depends on the type of English.
- In American English, “defense” is most common, so it’s thesis defense.
- In British English, “defence” is standard, so it’s thesis defence.
The same difference applies to similar words, such as offence or offense, licence or license, and pretence or pretense.
It’s important to choose one spelling and use it consistently. The QuillBot Grammar Checker can help you with this.
Continue reading: Is it thesis defense or defence?
Defence and defense are two spellings of the same noun. The spelling depends on the type of English.
- In American English, “defense” is most common, so it’s “PhD defense.”
- In British English, “defence” is standard, so it’s “PhD defence.”
The same difference applies to similar words, such as offence or offense, licence or license, and pretence or pretense.
It’s important to choose one spelling and use it consistently. The QuillBot Grammar Checker can help you with this.
Continue reading: Is it PhD defense or defence?
The most common version is marketing flyer. Even though flier and flyer are often used interchangeably, most language authorities favor “flyer” to refer to a leaflet.
The plural noun form is marketing flyers.
The QuillBot Grammar Checker can automatically fix your mistakes for free!
Continue reading: Is it marketing flier or flyer?
Both frequent flier and frequent flyer can be used to describe someone who flies often. Even though flier and flyer are often used interchangeably, most language authorities favor “flier” to refer to someone who flies.
The plural noun form is frequent fliers.
The QuillBot Grammar Checker can automatically fix your mistakes for free!
Continue reading: Is it frequent flier or flyer?
The most common version is paper flyer. Even though flier and flyer are often used interchangeably, most language authorities favor “flyer” to refer to a leaflet.
The plural noun form is paper flyers.
The QuillBot Grammar Checker can automatically fix your mistakes for free!
Continue reading: Is it paper flyer or flier?