Strictly speaking "someone" rather than "someone else" could include yourself and it is quite permissible to say "I'm collecting this on my own behalf" so, yes, there is a difference. Most people would interpret the phrase without the word "else" in it as meaning someone other than yourself but, strictly, you should include it: "someone else's" also sounds more colloquial. I would include the ...
What's the word to describe someone who acts arrogantly and always disagrees with others unreasonably in order to upset people around him/her? [I'm not looking for adjectives like unpleasant, anno...
I wasn't looking so much to signify the person who does the job but for the action or process itself, the action (a noun not a verb) of doing someone else's job during his/her vacations, the same way as tenure and intership are nouns.
I'm looking for a phrase that describes someone who's really bad at cooking, similar to 'green fingers' for someone who's good at gardening. There doesn't seem to be any such phrase from a Google s...
If you are talking "on behalf of" you and someone else, what is the ...
A controversial scene from Stephen King's It novel hasn’t been adapted to TV or film, but it has a symbolic meaning. In 1986, Stephen King terrorized readers with the novel It, which introduced a ...