
What is the difference between Clients and Clientele? [closed]
Mar 21, 2019 · Clients is the plural of client, and clientele refers to a body clients, per Merriam-Webster. The tiny difference must be derived from experience and familiarity with usage, then.
collective nouns - Question on usage of "clientele" - English Language ...
Apr 6, 2014 · The difference between U.S. English and British English here isn't as big as everybody thinks it is. The collective nouns which are always treated as singular in U.S. English are things like …
phrase requests - "high-end clientele" is to "low-end clientele" as ...
Feb 9, 2016 · high-end clientele is to low-end clientele as carriage trade is to coach trade. The railroad recognizes that the change in dining car patronage from the carriage trade to the coach trade …
"have been requested", "has been" or "had been" [duplicate]
Mar 5, 2017 · Thank you so much, appreciate your kind answer Jangari. in my question i wanted to ask when to use "have, has been & had been". i got it. we can use has and have been for an event that …
grammar - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
0 Clientele is a word meaning the clients or customers, as of a professional person or shop, considered collectively.
"Authorization" vs "Authorisation" - I'm in some real dilemma
I'm writing a professional business-related project summary, whereby half of the clientele is in the U.S while the other half of the same business is in the U.K. - and I don't want to disappoint ei...
single word requests - The opposite of "one size fits all" - English ...
Apr 14, 2014 · Is there a neat word or phrase that summarizes the opposite of "one size fits all"? "One size does not fit all" is not an option. What am looking for is something that means "different sizes for …
british english - When a UK person says "Cheers" to me, what's the ...
Jan 25, 2017 · I've been working with UK clientele for several years (I'm American), and I always fumble whenever somebody ends a call with "Cheers". What do I say then? Same deal with British …
Difference between "Upscale", "high-toned/tony", "fancy", "high-end ...
The first four examples and upscale have a roughly identical meaning, which is expensive and of high quality, being typically patronized by the wealthy and notable. (Admittedly I had to look up tony, …
Newest 'differences' Questions - English Language & Usage Stack …
Dec 23, 2025 · This tag is for questions about the differences in the meaning of two words. For us to be able to help you, please provide the sourced definitions that you are referring to, where the confusion …