Replaced with) of the post the interchange verbs substitute, replace, swap, exchange and switch. In each case, there is a new and an old, but the patterns go like this It's the standard passive construction
Ferdinand Magellans Ship
New school busses have replaced the old ones, so the old school busses have been replaced by new ones. the subject of replace.
String 'x' is replaced with 'y', by the computer, using the algorithm
'by' can refer to the 'agent' of a passive clause 'with' can refer to an 'instrument' (tool), but 'using' is stronger English is my second language Which of the following is correct
Replaced with a new printer Replaced by a new printer. I remember reading once or twice a likely latin expression which says more or less that some argument or proof in mathematics holds word for word when "x" In my specific case, i need a single word to call an employee who is being replaced by another due to his/her retirement, death, resignation etc

I generally know the difference between the 2 words
Residents of the housing project were displaced. Bce/ce usually refers to the common era (the years are the same as ad/bc) That is, bc is usually understood to mean before the common era and ce to mean common era, though. While you still have grammatically correct sentences if you omit those phrases, the meaning has become less precise
In the case of the first sentence with omission , is the. Where should in its entirety be used in place of in entirety Which usage is correct, and is the alternative incorrect / less correct, or simply not. I often see replace with and replace by used interchangeably, but this doesn't sound right to me

I replaced that component by this one
I would use with in such a sentence New school busses have replaced the old ones, so the old school busses have been replaced by new ones. the subject of replace can. Anything like “replacee” may be. That is, bc is usually understood to mean before the common era and ce to mean common era, though it is.
Replace and substitute do mean the same thing, but in opposite directions


