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1 The kitchen is the place I like to have the cleanest at all times. Since I moved out and have been living on my own, cleanliness has been a big part of my everyday life, as opposed to when I lived with a roommate and didn't care how the place looked.
I'm having trouble with the bold bits?
The kitchen is the place (Perfectly good sentence all by itself)
[that] I like to have the cleanest at all times. A little awkward because we do not know what is less clean, but okay I guess.
Since I moved out and have been living on my own, An opening subordinate clause, okay with the ","
cleanliness has been a big part of my everyday life, A sentence all by itself. (If has been is a linking verb (I think it is), then the rest is the predicate complement, okay?)
as opposed to=in comparasion with) when I lived with a roommate and didn't care how the place looked. An okay subordinate clause.
2 If you don't need your salary, in your case your unemployment benefits, then you're more likely to forget to even ask for what's due to you.
I'd leave the TO, isn't it WHAT'S DUE TO YOU and not "DUE YOU"?
and the bold bit can be left as a subordinate clause, OPTIONAL? right?
thank you
I am not sure what is going on in 2., maybe you are confusing unemployment benifits with salary, but in truth, #2 reads like crap, all over the place. Because the "you don't need" already singles out the person (the you) the "in you case" is redundant, completely unnecessary. "your unemployment benifits" does not fit in with "If you don't need your salary," and then you cut it off with the comma. The result is that it doesn't fit anywere. Remember you have an "if" and a "then." If you choose to use these words you have to organize your sentence around them.
"If you don't need your salary, then your unemployment benifits... is a start. What must follow is why the unemployment benifits are relevant to not having a salary. Otherwise it is just an odd ball comment that does not fit in. Most likely the best would be to make it two different sentences with you stating more completely what it is you are trying to say.
As for DUE YOU and DUE TO YOU. "Due Sam $100"., means Sam has $100 coming, or we owe it to him. "Due to Sam", means he caused something to happen, or perhaps moral guilt of some sort. "Because of Sam" is more or less the same thing.
4 Run the pasta under cold water once in the seive or else the pasta will keep cooking. (does this male sense? and is the word RUN?)
When you want to describe doing someting, normally you put it in the order that you do it. As, "Put the pasta in a seive and under cold running water, or else it will keep cooking."
thank you
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