When the articles of incoporation are approved, a corporation comes into existence.
Does "comes into existence" mean "is founded?"
Can I say "Jame's promise of being a student student came into existence yesterday?"
Thanks!
In that context, yes.Originally Posted by bread
Yes, but it would be better to say, "Jame's promise of becoming a student student became a reality yesterday."Originally Posted by bread
:)
Good! I agree! :wink:Originally Posted by RonBee
I just noticed that we have been stuttering. ("student student")
:wink:
Originally Posted by RonBee
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