What is the difference between fulfill and fill? In the following example, do they have the same meaning? I'll fill the form tomorrow. I'll fulfill the form tomorrow.
“The aid is intended to fill the food shortage in the area”. But your example sentence is very strange, and not because of the choice of verb. In “We can X each other’s shortages”, I can’t think of any verb that would make the sentence make sense without having to think up highly specific contexts.
Assuming you are an Italian currently in Rome At the beginning you fill out I Giorgio Aptsiauri, country Italy, date of birth 1 Jan 1990 At the end Done at Rome on October 26 2020 As @KateBunting suggested in a comment forms in the UK do not usually ask you to say where you filled it out but in some countries this is more common.
Unlike with "fill," "pour" only works one way: [x] The bottles are poured with wine. [ ] Wine is poured into the bottles. "Pour" is used for things that can flow; wine is a liquid and can flow, and grains of sand, in the aggregate, can also exhibit fluid-like properties (it is perfectly fine to "pour sand into a pail").
A fill plug is compressed mass of medication in powder or granule form, used to fill capsules of medicine. Plug fill appears to be an alternate term for the same thing.
This sentence doesn't make sense to me. It seems unlikely that during the last year there were tens of thousands of novel-based movies made. What might be true is that, as of last year, many of the world's great novels have already been made into movies (over the past 120 years) - ie there are few left that haven't. But that's not what any of the options say. Unless 'last year' refers to ...
In my experience (Aus) a prescription is filled out (sometimes abbreviated to filled) by a pharmacist when the medicine is dispensed. Forms are sometimes filled out, but more often filled in.
I have a question about the difference between the verb "cover" and phrase "fill in" in couple of work-related contexts. The common feature of the two contexts is a store with two employees, John ...