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  2. For example: The new land, rife with opportunities, gave the perfect place to build a new home. But at the same time the following sentence is also correct, A situation, ripe with opportunity, is a rare event, and it comes once in a lifetime or not at all. So I think both can be used, it just depends on how you use it.

  3. An idiom to describe "missing an opportunity or deadline"

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/347717

    I'm writing a marketing copy and encountered the need for an idiom that means "forgetting and thus missing an opportunity or deadline". The expression I'm looking for is informal. The target audience is mainly North Americans. I found the phrase "miss the boat", but came to the conclusion that it's not very commonly used.

  4. Is there a single-word antonym for "Opportunity"?

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/268061

    An 'opportunity' by definition is a circumstance where one has possibility of gaining some benefit, and a 'threat' is exactly the opposite - a circumstance where one has possibility of some loss. However, in day-to-day context, we could take ' adversity ' as antonym for ' opportunity '.

  5. provide somebody with something. In the first, the material provided is the object, in the second the recipient is the object. Both are valid, and both are in common use. The difference between them is the with phrase, which must be there to get meaning 2: if there is only one (direct) object, then meaning 1 is the relevant one (the to phrase ...

  6. Contextual meaning of "afforded to" - English Language & Usage...

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/45525/contextual...

    According to Merriam Webster Dictionary, afford has two meanings: to be able to bear the cost of. to make available, give forth, or provide naturally or inevitably. In what contexts are the two meanings appropriate? Is the use of afforded to in the following phrase correct? Growth prospects afforded to employees of your firm. meaning-in-context.

  7. word choice - To avail oneself of an opportunity - English...

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/52383

    6. avail oneself of, to use to one's advantage: They availed themselves of the opportunity to hear a free concert. So avail yourself of the opportunity means the same thing as take [advantage of] the opportunity: But if you are able to gain your freedom, take advantage of the opportunity. However, within the past 40 years, this usage of avail ...

  8. verbs - What's the difference between "I look forward to" and...

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/10144/whats-the...

    Stack Exchange Network. Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q&A communities including Stack Overflow, the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers.

  9. Difference between "chance" and "opportunity" [closed]

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/32700

    Chance is definitively much wider term that can be: an unpredictable event or accidental happening. risk or gamble. the happening of events without apparent cause, or the apparent absence of cause or design; fortuity; luck. a ticket in a lottery or raffle. an advantageous or opportune time or occasion; opportunity.

  10. Is this correct: "a door of opportunity opens up for people"?

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/552776/is-this-correct...

    A 'door of opportunity' is a fixed metaphorical expression. See for instance assemblenetwork.org 'Window of opportunity' is probably even more common ... and less logical-sounding. – Edwin Ashworth

  11. word choice - To take advantage of an opportunity - English...

    english.stackexchange.com/questions/476783

    1. I am applying for a special 2-days business course and I have a couple of questions about the sentence below. "No one better than me would be able to take full advantage of this unique opportunity." 1) I am not sure about the use of "to take advantage of an opportunity" in this context, since I know that it generally has a negative connotation.