Community Discussions
What does "due" mean as in "due diligence" or "due procedure"?
Do those mean the same thing? I looked up the word in the dictionary and one of the definitions is "of the proper quality or extent." Not sure if this applies to "due diligence" and "due procedure"

"You're being prejudice"
Is this sentence ok? Didn't know you could use "prejudice" this way. Is it a British English thing?

Why is there not many "had" in this? Isn't he referring to something that happened in the past?
https://i.redd.it/7gqezd7hepne1.jpeg
"He took a picture of me" or "he took a picture of mine" which one is correct
https://www.reddit.com/r/EnglishLearning/comments/1j7806h/he_took_a_picture_of_me_or_he_took_a_picture_of/
how can l fill in the blank?
Β I'm not the kind of person that plans every little detail. In fact, it's the opposite - I enjoy\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_

The worst translation XD
https://i.redd.it/eszfx7hdgeje1.jpeg
Countries being called she/her
Mostly curious, because when i see people talk about my country or others, a lot of them do say she/her when talking about it "I love England, her history is vast." etc is there a grammar reason for it? or just a social/historical thing

What does "Stand by for proof of death" mean?
In movie teaser "Captain America: Brave New World" There is a debate in the Korean community about which of the two is correct. - Stand by for proof of death - 1. Send you the death certificate. 2. Wait until the death is confirmed. Which one is correct?
How can I expand my vocab to native speaker level?
https://www.reddit.com/r/EnglishLearning/comments/1hzmo2j/how_can_i_expand_my_vocab_to_native_speaker_level/
How much native English speakers use phrasal verbs
https://www.reddit.com/r/EnglishLearning/comments/1hub54q/how_much_native_english_speakers_use_phrasal_verbs/