Onslaught FastCap combines a microencapsulated material with a fast-acting synergist to knock down pests that are there, and give long-lasting control. Non-repellent materials are those that are undetectable to pests, such as baits and insect growth regulators IGRs. Non-repellents often have a good residual, though this varies from product to product.
Using a repellent product in a situation that calls for a non-repellent can have consequences when it comes to the time it takes to control a pest and customer satisfaction. Be familiar with your products and get a step on the competition. Ocean vs. Judge vs. Flag vs. Forbear vs. Awesomely vs. Fat vs. Sonhood vs. Ricochet vs. Channel vs. Trending Comparisons.
Mandate vs. Ivermectin vs. Skinwalker vs. Socialism vs. Man vs. Supersonic vs. Gazelle vs. Jem vs. Elinor redoubled her loving ways from that time, and strove to cheer and gladden him, but he was almost repellant.
New Word List Word List. Save This Word! See synonyms for repellent on Thesaurus. We could talk until we're blue in the face about this quiz on words for the color "blue," but we think you should take the quiz and find out if you're a whiz at these colorful terms.
Countable But the green can doesn't have much repellent left. I don't think I've ever heard that they must be used depending on countability; could you cite a source, cyberpedant? Assuming there isn't a change based on countability, it seems to me that repell e nt would be the "more correct" spelling, as it is truer to its Latin root. They come down to us from Latin and depending on the different conjugational pattern of the verb, means a different spelling. Repell ent is the 'correct' yet arbitrary spelling, because it comes from Latin repellere.
In the link in 4, you'll notice it logs the word was repellant , but all description of the word does not include this form, it only has the -e form, it wouldn't trigger a "no such word found" because it's that common. I didn't say that. The words in my post are spelled " Alxmrphi said:. If I changed "' correct' " still in quotes to " most widely recognised and accepted, pertaining to the correct historical Latin word ", would it satisfy your conditions for etymological legitimacy?
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