What is the difference between fulfill and fill? In the following example, do they have the same meaning? I'll fill the form tomorrow. I'll fulfill the form tomorrow.
And you can fill in a form because you're supplying missing information. Fill out is generally used when you tell someone to enter all the fields on a form of more than one field. Example: Please fill out this form. Fill out means to complete by supplying requested information.
In school, for exams we FILL UP forms. But I have seen people saying "FILL IN the form." Fill the form in OR fill the form up, which is correct. Please explain.
Unlike with "fill," "pour" only works one way: [x] The bottles are poured with wine. [ ] Wine is poured into the bottles. "Pour" is used for things that can flow; wine is a liquid and can flow, and grains of sand, in the aggregate, can also exhibit fluid-like properties (it is perfectly fine to "pour sand into a pail").
For example, if I missed sweeping some leaves in the backyard while the rest is spotless, or if I forgot to fill out a section on a form? The idiom "miss a spot" is commonly used when someone leaves a small area unclean or unpainted.
0 In many books and sites of English learners there are exercise that require from the learner to put the missing word / article in the 'space' between two words or at the end of the sentence. What is this place called? ("Fill the ___ with the correct articles in following sentence") For now I didn't find the term in English or in my language.
There was a series of commercials for the "Brim" coffee brand with the tagline "Fill it to the rim with Brim!" They used the word "rim" because the coffee was already called "Brim", but it always seemed a little unnatural (to me) because "to the brim" is what I would normally say.
Assuming you are an Italian currently in Rome At the beginning you fill out I Giorgio Aptsiauri, country Italy, date of birth 1 Jan 1990 At the end Done at Rome on October 26 2020 As @KateBunting suggested in a comment forms in the UK do not usually ask you to say where you filled it out but in some countries this is more common.