What is the difference between viewpoint and viewmont?

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zohre

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What is the difference between viewpoint and viewmont?

please tell about it to me.thanks in advance
 
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What is the difference between "viewpoint" and "viewmont"?

Please tell me about [STRIKE]it to me[/STRIKE] those words. (Space required after a full stop.) Thanks in advance.

Welcome to the forum. :hi:

Note my corrections above. It's important to follow these rules of written English:

- Start every sentence with a capital letter.
- End every sentence with one appropriate punctuation mark.
- Don't put a space before a comma, full stop, question mark or exclamation mark.
- Always put a space after a comma, full stop, question mark or exclamation mark.
- Mark out the words you are asking us about in some way. I have enclosed them in quotation marks above.

The main difference is that "viewpoint" is a valid English word and "viewmont" does not exist. Where have you seen "viewmont"?
 
Thanks alot for your guides.
I saw this word (viewmont) in Hazar Blue book.
But I don't remember where was exactly.
 
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Thanks [STRIKE]alot[/STRIKE] a lot for your [STRIKE]guides[/STRIKE] reply.
I saw [STRIKE]this[/STRIKE] the word "viewmont" in Hazar Blue book, but I don't remember where [STRIKE]was[/STRIKE] exactly.

If you can find the word again in that book, please give us the complete sentence in which it appears. As far as I know, it can be a company name or street name but it's not a standard word.

Note my corrections above. When you mark out specific words, it's best to do so in one of three ways:

"in quotation marks"
in italics
in bold

Putting them in brackets doesn't work.
 
Robbadob, please read this extract from the forum's Posting Guidelines:


You are welcome to answer questions posted in the Ask a Teacher forum as long as your suggestions, help, and advice reflect a good understanding of the English language. If you are not a teacher, you will need to state that clearly in your post. Please note, all posts are moderated by our in-house language experts, so make sure your suggestions, help, and advice provide the kind of information an international language teacher would offer. If not, and your posts do not contribute to the topic in a positive way, they will be subject to deletion.
 
Not a teacher.
Viewpoint=standpoint?
 
Robbadob, now that you have more than ten posts, you can add "Not a teacher" to the signature in your profile. It will appear below each of your posts.
 
OK. Could you please answer my question?
 
When I registered on this forum, I was able to select a member type. It's clearly displayed in my profile that I'm interested in the English language, not that I'm a teacher. It's rather pointless to state something that is evident. Perhaps a more accurate description for new members would be "teacher" and "not a teacher".
 
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For some reason, there are a lot of places around here (Charlotte) with Viewmont in the name. Apparently, all of them are in Hickory. Hm.
 
If you can find the word again in that book, please give us the complete sentence in which it appears. As far as I know, it can be a company name or street name but it's not a standard word.

Note my corrections above. When you mark out specific words, it's best to do so in one of three ways:

"in quotation marks"
in italics
in bold

Putting them in brackets doesn't work.

Thanks again and sorry for my mistakes. I am really pleased that I can learn something new by your throuble.
Ok, I will share with you as far as I can.
 
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Viewpoint=standpoint?
If this is a question, it should be written like this:

Does 'viewpoint' mean 'standpoint'?

In some contexts it does mean the same.

You still need to put Not a teacher in your signature line.
 
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