Perhaps I should write just that - that I regularly read research papers and nursing journals to keep myself up to date and my practice current. To reserve is to keep for some future use, occasion, or recipient, or to hold back for a time: to reserve judgment. Because I feel like when you say "keep you up-to-date", it's like I'm a program or something like that. It would be "keep you up to date", no hyphens. I am writing a letter of motivation to go with my application for a nursing post and would like to add the following: "I keep myself up to date with the latest developments in nursing". Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. Keep, reserve, retain, withhold refer to having and holding in possession. Yahoo Answers Best Answer: Either is fine in speech. Je ne sais pas si on peut utiliser "infirmerie" dans ce sens, Guill peut-être "en matière de soins infirmiers". If you are at an office or shared network, you can ask the network administrator to run a scan across the network looking f