Exacerbate has the same meaning as Escalate. E.g. The new law exacerbated the initial problem. The separation between the three comes on what sort of scenario you want to use and how substantial the increase of that change should be. ...
And I find the meme 'that escalated quickly', and looks like it has a similar meaning to escalade. Can anyone tell me what escalade means in 'one issue escalades another'? Can I use escalate instead? verbs Share Improve this question Follow edited Oct 17, 2012 at 16:28 Marthaª 33...
This has been the most disappointing response over the weekend. They are flailing. It has not been helpful for Warren, Buttigieg and others to accuse Trump of acting rashly without thinking through the consequences of his actions. That approach shies away from recognizing that his action did inde...
your organization is likely already breached. One reason the response may be so slow is many organizations may not realize they have exchange servers exposed to the Internet—this is a common issue we see with
I'm gonna put this simply for all you good folk out there. I don't care they made cartoons. It wasn't very nice to depict our prophet as a terrorist. However, when we start standing up to the animals using our religion as an excuse for murder, maybe they will understand the differe...
Oh good grief. Don't give us this crap. The US would like nothing more than Korea to be unified so it can go home. It's CHINA who wants North Korea to remain as is because they fool the world into thinking they can control North Korea, which gives them bargaining ...
Even if you aren’t bothered about the company’s revenue, handling a call badly can lead to gross misconduct. Meaning you, or your staff can lose their job over it. And as theCall Centre Management Associationreports that call centre turnover rates are around 26% annually, this is certain...
Perhaps this had somehow slipped the sovereign's mind when she ordered Arbiter to issue his pompous warning about the royal family's stern refusal to be used "in any way for advertising or promotion". Incidentally, the website's address is www. royal.gov.uk. Don't make the mistake of ...