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. The crisis is the direct object of blame and the banks is the object of "on" Yes, of course; I presumed you were speaking of verb objects. .
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I've asked wider and it appears there are actually two objects in the thread post.
The crisis is the direct object of blame and the banks is the object of "on".
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If this is a sentence, it should begin with a capital letter. The subject of your sentence is the gerund "displaying," which is singular, and should take a singular verb, "does." "Displaying does give." You must
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"Then, at their request, we became serious, deciding to let them play their little game". Could someone kindly correct me? Does underlined act like infinitive as an adverbial modifier of purpose ? Thank you in advance.
Well,
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I love this! The second sentence is in passive voice, which is only possible with a transitive verb. The direct object of the verb in the passive voice is actually the subject, "our understanding." The actor is often not mentioned.
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Hi teachers,
I just have a few questions from the answers not clear. I'd hope you could help out. Sorry for keeping you. My questions are in purple. Thank you
1 . If I rented a booth at a trade show, I need internet access
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
tinanam0102
197 days ago
Dates, Prepositions, Numbers, Direct Objects, Arts, Writing, Sentences, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Online, Asia, China, Apologies, Languages
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"I know what Carol to do" is wrong. Indeed, it is wrong after the verb "know." But these are fine: I know what Carol does. I know how Carol drives. I know that Carol knows how to drive. I know that Carol should drive more
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Here is an analysis of this sentence: Much (pronoun, subject of the sentence) of the credit (prepositional phrase. credit is a noun, object of the preposition) for compliance (prepositional phrase) with affirmative action (prepositional phrase)
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I have talked to Lewis for awhile while you were bathing. I talked to Lewis for awhile while you were bathing. (Should be this one &) I talked to Lewis for awhile when you were bathing. (this one,right? since "when"
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
avangi
205 days ago
Clauses, Adverbs, Present Tenses, Simple Past, Present Perfect, Past Tenses, Direct Objects, Writing, Sentences, Context, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Simple Tenses, Apologies
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Look in your dictionary for meanings. Dictate often takes a direct object noun clause beginning with "what." That is more common than a prepositional phrase beginning with "on." Here are some examples from COCA . The pope
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