
to do an effort vs to make an effort | WordReference Forums
Jan 20, 2010 · The reason I'm asking whether "make an effort" would be understood as "do physical activity" is that "make an effort" in dictionaries is defined as "to try to do something" …
an effort or efforts - WordReference Forums
Jul 26, 2015 · The answer seems to be: effort is singular, efforts is plural. 1. Do you need to make one type of effort once or that effort in a continuing manner? -> Teachers who guide students …
Efforts of or efforrts by? - WordReference Forums
Oct 10, 2018 · Which is the correct preposition to use in the following sentence: 'Many POW camps had their own libraries thanks to the efforts of (or by?) charitable organisations'?
spare no effort or spare no efforts? - WordReference Forums
Sep 20, 2015 · spare no effort to do something to work as hard as possible to achieve something Emergency services have spared no effort to help people whose homes were destroyed by the …
make effort/make an effort | WordReference Forums
Dec 12, 2010 · The phrase "Make an effort" is a verb phrase meaning "to work towards a goal". Generally in English, you need an article "the, an, some" in front of nouns to make them work …
Put in + effort - WordReference Forums
Mar 31, 2017 · Hello everyone, Does "put in" + "effort" meaning "use physical strength", "make a physical effort" (to move, carry, lift) objects sound natural/correct in the examples I made …
Put in time and effort/ Put time and effort into - WordReference …
Jul 9, 2020 · I've always been confused about 'put in work/effort/hours.' Please let me know if the following are correct: 1) Put work/effort/time/work into: a) He has put a lot of time and effort …
put effort in/into +ing - WordReference Forums
Oct 22, 2010 · Hi! I was wondering how to use correctly the expression "so we'll put extra effort in trying to catch up again". Basically I want to say that I deliberately avoid doing sth (es. phoning …
Time and effort was/were put into - WordReference Forums
Jun 29, 2015 · Hello, Sentence: Do you know how much time and effort was/were put into making this happen? When I have two uncountable nouns, should I go with was or were? Thanks!
many efforts or much efforts - WordReference Forums
Dec 4, 2020 · The plural doesn't sound normal in this sentence. How much effort is it worth? is a normal question. If you want to pluralize efforts, many efforts makes sense. Much efforts is …