23 With is an instrumental usage, as if English is being considered as a tool -- proficient with knives, proficient with horses, proficient with languages, especially English. Perfectly cromulent, but not often encountered, I suspect. At is a punctual locative, locating some spot in a larger area or metaphoric space (e.g, in May, on Tuesday, at 2:34 pm) -- proficient at getting his deer every ...
With is an instrumental usage, as if English is being considered as a tool -- proficient with knives, proficient with horses, proficient with languages, especially English. Perfectly cromulent, but not often encountered, I suspect. At is a punctual locative, locating some spot in a larger area or metaphoric space (e.g, in May, on Tuesday, at 2:34 pm) -- proficient at getting his deer every ...
Closed 13 years ago. I would like to create a list of terms, from beginner to expert, using as many terms as possible which represent different levels of expertise. I have constructed by myself: Newbie Novice Rookie Beginner Talented Skilled Intermediate Skillful Seasoned Proficient Experienced Advanced Senior Expert What do you think is the ...
Proficient : Has good knowledge and has skill enough to know one technique. Expert : Has a very good knowledge and knows about more than one technique. Master : Is a reference on the subject, very deep knowledge and dominates the subject. As you can see, there is gaps on such skill levels.
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