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  1. Oct 22, 2013 · In Canada it is typical in proper names, e.g. Toronto Centre for the Arts, but "center" is also commonly used otherwise, e.g. shopping center, center of town. Both spellings can be encountered even in the same text, e.g. in NHL hockey where there are many Canadian and US teams, reference might be made to the "center" forward position and a "centre" where a game is played.

  2. Mar 28, 2015 · Wikipedia defines center of excellence as: a team, a shared facility or an entity that provides leadership, evangelization, best practices, research, support and/or training for a technology, a business concept, a skill, or a broad area of study. Here is an Ngram that contrasts the usage of center of excellence vs center for excellence.

  3. Mar 3, 2016 · 1. Middle just means intermediate, and isn't specific. However, centre is the specific geometrical (or geographical or whatever one works on) middle. Share. Improve this answer. answered Oct 9, 2017 at 10:10. Z. A. Kwan. 11 1. 1.

  4. Apr 3, 2016 · @Inazuma: I don't know the physics well enough to say whether the (gravitational) centre of the solar system is actually within whatever we consider to be the "surface" of the sun, but I do know enough to know that the centre of the system won't be exactly the centre of the sun.

  5. It may not be the exact centre of the city, geographically speaking (although it often is). "A City's Centre" is not an idiomatic term like above, so arguably it could mean the exact centre of a city as it appears on a map; however I imagine that most people would assume you meant "the city centre" anyway. If your intention was to define the ...

  6. Mar 7, 2015 · Centric is an adjective. Centre (US: center) is a verb. It is also a noun. And nouns can be used as adjectives. Rarely, adjectives can be used as nouns (the poor). Therefore, unless the two words are being used as the same part of speech, they are not synonyms. As a verb center / centre is quite often followed by on.

  7. "Go to the centre" sounds like you are going to the 'dead centre'; that is the precise central point of something. A "city centre" is not necessarily the central point of a place, but is what we call the main business and commercial area of a city. As you are entering an area rather than going to a fixed point, it makes sense to say "into".

  8. Jul 23, 2016 · Into the centre. Using into suggests that there is some kind of building or structure or enclosure to enter. You could argue though that the centre is it's own structure of some sort (like a force field) and there is a border between the outside of the centre and the inside. Let's go into the centre. It basically means that we are going inside ...

  9. May 10, 2020 · 1. city center is more idiomatic, though the other option isn't wrong (at least not from a grammar perspective). One way to see this is through the Google Ngram Viewer, which shows city center is used about 10 times as often as city's center: Share. Improve this answer.

  10. Mar 19, 2023 · centre-aligned (aka centred) if the middle of each line is midway between the sides. When dealing with languages that are written with right-to-left scripts, we may need to use direction-dependent terms - start-aligned and end-aligned - if we want the alignment to be correct for the writing direction.