Class of 2018. Your Facebook Group

<p>Here is the link to the facebook group of class of 2018 aspirants.</p>

<p>I command you all to join it.
Lets help each other. :)</p>

<p>Bumpp!! 10char</p>

<p>codeguy</p>

<p>My advise, you should try to have college related discussion here on CC. And you can have your fun group on Facebook and discuss the topics which are a taboo here on CC there. That way more people can have an access to information. And it will benefit future applicants too, beyond 2018ers.</p>

<p>*advice
.</p>

<p>What I am saying is, “Advise can be a noun meaning to give advice, counsel, warn, recommend, or simply inform. It is also used as a verb meaning to give someone advice.”</p>

<p>I am not, "However, advise should not be confused with the noun, advice. Advice denotes an opinion which someone offers about what you should do or how you should act in a particular situation. "</p>

<p>So I am using it as a recommendation and not an opinion.</p>

<p>Thank you though, for bringing it up. It made me clarify and test my understanding again.</p>

<p>Ok. First off, I was just bored so I’m not pointing fingers or anything.</p>

<p>You’d be teaching me something but “Advise is a noun meaning to give advice…”
noun=to give advice? “To give advice” sounds more like a phrasal verb to me. I’d actually like to figure this one out 'cause I didn’t really get what you’re saying and semantics interests me. I’ll take this one to PMs or something though 'cause this isn’t the right forum. :)</p>

<p>No problem.</p>

<p>So basically what I am saying is I used the word “advise” as a recommendation or was simply informing them. </p>

<p>I was neither giving an opinion, nor telling them what they should do or should not do, which would then be an “advice”.</p>

<p>Maybe, the word “should” needed to be avoided in my sentence. “My advise, you should try to have college related discussion here on CC.”</p>