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to move; to circulate; to draft; to assemble for action (especially armed reserves)
indicate
mobilize
foster
resign
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well-known / well known



 
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well-known / well known #1 (permalink) Sun Oct 24, 2010 12:46 pm   well-known / well known
 

http://sports.yahoo.com/top/news?slug=txswimmerdies
Crippen’s family is well-known in the swimming world.

Is well-known fine?
There isn't a noun after well-known, so isn't "well known" correct?
Tofu
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well-known / well known #2 (permalink) Sun Oct 24, 2010 14:50 pm   well-known / well known
 

You are correct. It's a minor point, easily overlooked by news editors in their haste.
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well-known / well known #3 (permalink) Sun Oct 24, 2010 14:52 pm   well-known / well known
 

well-known is ok. It plays a role of adjective, so adjective after the verb is ok.

It is very nice that I took some information from "http://www.englishclub.com/grammar/adjectives-order_2.htm" to express my answer below.

An adjective can come after some verbs, such as: be, become, feel, get, look, seem, smell, sound
Even when an adjective comes after the verb and not before a noun, it always refers to and qualifies the subject of the sentence, not the verb.

E.g:
-Your friend looks nice.
-It smells bad.

By the way, if Mr. Beeesneees is correcting this topic, then could you please glance my topic for help? The topic is "Adjustment Letter [Help to correct]" ^^. I appreciate your help.
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well-known / well known #4 (permalink) Sun Oct 24, 2010 14:55 pm   well-known / well known
 

Thank you, B.
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