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Jackson6612 Posted 15 years ago
Grammar

Electronic current wave, electronic wave

Hi

Which one of the two you find correct (or, more correct)? I think "current" and "wave" have overlapping meanings. Please let me know your choice. Thank you

1: electronic current wave

2: electronic wave

Regards

Jackson
  

Top answer

Hi, I'm not an electronic engineer, but it seems best to me to say either 'wave' or 'current', but not both together. As for the difference between a wave and a current, I leave that to you to figure out. Clive

  • Hi, I'm not an electronic engineer, but it seems best to me to say either 'wave' or 'current', but not both together.
  • As for the difference between a wave and a current, I leave that to you to figure out.
  • Clive
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1 Answers
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Hi,

I'm not an electronic engineer, but it seems best to me to say either 'wave' or 'current', but not both together.

As for the difference between a wave and a current, I leave that to you to figure out.

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