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  1. Jun 13, 2013 · I'd not - "Applaud the director!" is the normal imperative. "Applause for the director!" is fine as a verbless imperative. I stand corrected. It should`ve been without for ("Applaud the director!"). Even in my language it`s without it. I should be more careful and not make such stupid mistakes. Thank you.

  2. Apr 13, 2015 · Applause refers to the act of applauding which is the act of expressing praise/satisfaction/ ...

  3. Banned. Tamil. Apr 25, 2017. #2. "Applause" refers to the action of clapping to show appreciation. A "clap" is a single instance of hitting your palms against each other. In your sentence, you need "Let's applaud him" or "Give him a round of applause". "Applause" is an uncountable noun.

  4. Apr 26, 2020 · A burst of applause is a natural, enthusiastic reaction by an audience to something exciting, unexpected, or previously anticipated. (For instance, if the audience knew a big star was going to make an appearance at a show and they were waiting for that moment during most of the show, then there would likely be a big burst of applause when the person finally appeared.)

  5. Jun 22, 2011 · Senior Member. England. English - England. Jun 22, 2011. #8. No, "claps" for him or her, or indeed for anyone, just doesn't work. I would stick with "a round of applause for", or you often hear "let's show our appreciation for"... but the latter would probably used for older kids or adults. A.

  6. Dec 15, 2015 · Chinese. Dec 15, 2015. #1. Hello, my friends, I was wondering which phrase could express the idea that someone clapped their hands to show their appreciation of someone's reply in a class: 1) Please give him applause. 2) Please give him a hand. Context: After a students answer the teacher's question, the teacher ask the whole class to show ...

  7. Jun 28, 2015 · Banned. English - U.S. Jun 28, 2015. #3. If you really finished the race because of your friends' applause, why not just say so? Neither "with" nor "under" is a synonym of "because" or "because of." If you finished the race because you heard your friends clapping for you while you were still short of the finish line, you could say that you ...

  8. Jan 13, 2017 · French. Jan 13, 2017. #1. I work for a cause, not for applause. In the Sentence above. 1)Is "not ", which is an adverb , modifying "For a cause ", which is a preposition phrase acting as an adverb . Or. 2) It's just there to avoid repeting the whole sentence again. I work for a cause, I don't work for applause.

  9. forum.wordreference.com › threads › give-a-warm-round-of-applause-for-to-somebodygive a warm round of applause for/to somebody

    Oct 9, 2018 · Senior Member. 1. Now let’s give a warm round of applause for our special guest tonight. 2. Now let’s give a warm round of applause to our chairman who will present the award. I wonder if ‘for’ and ‘to’ in the sentences above are interchangeable. Many thanks in advance.

  10. Mar 8, 2021 · The noun "sweat" is uncountable, but it's accompanied with the indefinite article unlike "laughter" and "applause". Similarly, it would be wrong to use the indefinite article in the construction with "song". - He broke into laughter. - He broke into applause. - He broke into sweat.

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