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  1. Mar 22, 2023 · Compared with to-day that was, upon the surface at any rate, an age of easy-going safety and good humour. The New World Order by H.G. Wells I used to hear the word "easy-going" about peo...

  2. Jun 27, 2015 · Viewed 15k times. 1. Which one is correct: He's really easy-going. OR. He's really easy going. As per my understanding, hyphen comes between compound adjectives if they are before noun; so the correct one is second one. But as per BBC website correct one is first one with hyphen. grammar.

  3. Nov 11, 2017 · Pigs may be easygoing animals, but they are highly intelligent, and when they do not want to do something, they have the brainpower to avoid it quite intelligently. They also have a loud and piercing shriek that sounds distressingly similar to a human baby's cry (which is why it has such a profound effect upon us; we're biologically primed to react to it).

  4. Tell me please the difference between the following sentences. February 11 was really hectic, so I had to do a ton on the day. February 11 was really hectic, so I had to do a ton in the day...

  5. Mar 9, 2013 · b. pretty much: almost, very nearly; more or less; (also, in early use) very much, considerably. Whilst this definition is specific to pretty much, I see it as very synonymous with pretty sure. The phrase I've pretty much finished work would imply, to me, that only a few moments' work is left.

  6. Adverbs can be placed in four positions in a sentence: 1.At the beginning; 2.At the end; 3.After the verb to be and all auxiliary verbs: can, may, will, must, shall etc. 4.Before all the other verbs. In case of modal verbs (have, can, will, shall, may, must, might), the adverb follows the verb. So, the better choice in your example is.