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Perfect Stranger Posted 12 years ago
Vocabulary

How to say it in English no. x12

Dear All,

I'm trying to convey the idea that a student's performance differs from one class to another (not sure if this sentence is correct) I also don't know if these words could be used in what I'm trying to say:

realisation
carrying out
rendering
execution

Thanks in advance
  

Top answer

Perfect Stranger realisationcarrying outrenderingexecution These all seem rather stilted to me as they stand. What is wrong with saying, "Mr Smith's performance is irregular; it differs/varies from class to class"? That sounds quite appropriate to me.

  • Perfect Stranger realisationcarrying outrenderingexecution These all seem rather stilted to me as they stand.
  • What is wrong with saying, "Mr Smith's performance is irregular; it differs/varies from class to class"?
  • That sounds quite appropriate to me.
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5 Answers
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Perfect Strangerrealisationcarrying outrenderingexecution
These all seem rather stilted to me as they stand. What is wrong with saying, "Mr Smith's performance is irregular; it differs/varies from class to class"? That sounds quite appropriate to me.
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Mister MicawberWhat is wrong with saying, "Mr Smith's performance is irregular; it differs/varies from class to class"? That sounds quite appropriate to me.
Thank you. I guess there's nothing wrong about it. I was simply trying to find another way to say it for the sake of enlarging the scope of sentences at my disposal.
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You could say his performance is inconsistent.
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I would use irregular to say that the performance doesn't happen on a set schedule. A regular show could be once a week, while an irregular one happens on day 1, then day 12, then day 14...

Inconsistent would mean that the quality is different from performance to performance.
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I think the OP's talking about a student's classwork.

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