posting videos on instagram - MARKETS
Both post and posting are the same according to Cambridge Dictionary (Android version). Both have the same meaning i.e. an electronic message that you send to a website in order to allow many peop...
Understanding the Context
If you post some letters for someone, you're saving them the trouble of posting those letters themselves (letters which they probably wrote themselves; certainly, letters which they are responsible for posting). If you post letters to someone, you hope they will eventually be delivered to that person. The simple past treats the posting as a finished action, ignoring the fact that it is located in a time period which encompasses the present). But with "last week", only the simple past is possible.
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+1 for the research you put in before posting :) My first thought however is that the answer will turn out to be "all of the above, and then some." For example, from my own work experience "team leader" would be the right answer for some of those sentences. The more important point is perhaps to know the culture and language of the organisation you are communicating within. I don't know of any stylistic implications worth posting here. The first version you wrote in your question (A new material for the manufacture of bricks) is by far the most common one. Stick with that for your own text, and accept that occasionally you'll read / hear other versions from other people.
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"She insisted on posting this one" would imply that she is posting it no matter what your opinion is. If she is trying to convince you to do it, the correct phrasing would be, "She insisted that I post this one." Some Americans would say "She insisted on me posting this one", but that's not quite grammatical. 'She insisted me to post this one.' or 'She insisted on posting this one.' I think that the history of usage may be that to "post under" comes from the term to "write under" a name - because the author's name would be on the cover, and their writing on the pages underneath the cover - it is a visualisation of posting content physically/spatially under the author's name. "Post with" is more abstract - indicating an association of the name with the content being posted ...