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"if it were up to me... there'd be...." or "if it was up to me... there'd be...."?

"If it were up to me ..." (The reason is that it's not up to me; we're talking about a hypothetical situation.) It would be the same thing for "If I were in charge ..." (not "If I was in charge ...")

please teach me how to use 'as' & 'that'? The dog is too old that it does nothing but sleeps. is it wrong if we put 'as' in that? Like this... The dog is too old as it does nothing but sleeps.

The first sentence should be "The dog is SO old that it does nothing but SLEEP." If you want to use "as" that way (as a conjunction), it has to mean "because": "The dog does nothing but sleep AS it is old." But even then, that sentence sounds awkward. Using "because" is much better.

different between live, life ?

"Life" is a noun, e.g., "My LIFE is full of drama." "What do you like most about your LIFE?"
"Live" is a verb (pronounced [liv]) or an adjective (pronounced [lie-v], like "five"):
- We LIVE (verb) in America.
- The song was recorded during a LIVE (adj.) performance.

what's the difference between "usage" and "utility"? and when should we use those words in a sentence? thank you for your halp! :3

"Usage" = the action of using something; the way in which something is normally and correctly used. "Utility" = usefulness; benefit; value. "Utility" = service provider.
- Keep tack of your cell phone USAGE.
- Energy USAGE goes up when the weather becomes unbearably hot.
- The new changes have increased the truck's UTILITY.
- The new taxes will fund an important public UTILITY.

What if i'm using american - english and british - english language in the same sentence?

Ojannoid’s Profile PhotoMochammad fauzan
That's fine. Just don't switch back and forth in the spelling of the same word. (For example, don't write "colour" in one sentence and then "color" in another. Most people won't care, but some might find it annoying and bothersome.)

What the different between price and cost ?

The technical definition of “price” is “the amount of money to gain a product or service.” "Cost” is “the amount paid to produce a product or service.”
But in everyday usage (not in economics, business, etc.), the two words are often used interchangeably, and many dictionaries will list them as synonyms.

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