Specialist or Specialised?
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| Specialised equipment for translators and proofreaders |
Here’s a fact of life: ZUS. From the moment you are born until the moment you die, ZUS will have its hot, implacable breath on your neck, it’s eyes on your accounts and its paws in your portfel. Here’s another fact of life: Being confused about whether to use specialist or specialised. And whilst I can’t help you with the evil flying monkeys of our beloved social insurance institution, I can help you with that other thing.
The answer is quite simple (for once) – specialist is a noun, and specialised is a verb. Dlatego, people and companies can be specialists; they specialise in things and offer specialised services using specialised(or special) equipment, itd itp. The brainiacs at Oxford define them like so:
specialist (n): 1person trained in a particular branch of a profession, esp. medicine. 2 person who specially studies a subject or area.
specialise (v): 1 (often followed by in) a. be or become a specialist. b devote oneself to an interest, skill, etc. (specialises in insulting people). 2(esp. in passive) adapt for a particular purpose (specialised organs). 3 (as specialized adj.) of a specialist (specialized work).
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| Ol' Stallone does tend to specialise in certain types of film (ho ho!) |


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