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Hi. Would you say we can use both relative pronouns (are they?) "which" and "that" with restrictive clauses? Or would you say that only the use of the pronoun "that" (for human and non-human) is correct for a
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There is no denying the fact that he is a faithful husband. I don't think you mean "parts of speech." I was always taught there are only eight of those. I don't know much about "that." "That he is a faithful
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
avangi
210 days ago
Articles, Clauses, Nouns, Pronouns, Noun Phrases, Relative Pronouns, Marriage, Adjectives, Relationships, Writing, Sentences, Phrases, Speaking, Speeches
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Very good, Mr. W - the original is confusing because it muddles the sequence of events. To me, the phrase is best placed as a modifier after the relative pronoun, "who." I should have tried it that way!
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1)Does the phrase need these words in bold to be grammatical, or do you think the group of words in the exemplary sentence are fine as a phrase; that is, they don't need their subjects and/or verbs? Is there rule for when they don't need
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Can you give me an example of one where it is attached to the end of the clause as like a verb cluster. I cannot think of an example, except in normal passive voice. The car, drven at high speed straight into the concrete barrier, was crushed
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"I saw him who was about to do it"? No, not with the relative pronoun like that. That means I saw that particular person who was about to do it, but not another person. Closer to what you want: I saw him as he was about to do it. = I saw
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We stopped as well at several villages along the way , where we were warmly greeted by the hospitable Dawu people and invited for a meal of flying fish.
You can't take many liberties with word order in English, Angliholic. I don't think
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
cool breeze
231 days ago
Prepositions, Clauses, Pronouns, Word Order, Relative Pronouns, Writing, Animals, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Languages
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The number of wealthy households whose annual income exceed or exceeds 250,000 yuan,... Check this out for size: Whose- refers to "households' income". even though income appears as singular, the relative pronoun "whose"
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Lisa is Taranaki’s very own ultra marathoner, recently completing/completed... In this case, if you use simple past you've got to use the relative pronoun WHO Lisa is Taranaki's very own ultra marathoner, who recently completed..because
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Hi AlpheccaStars, thank you so much for your help. I see...! I understand now, thanks to you. This "that" is a relative pronoun, and you cannot omit this one (because this is a subject of the relative clause, I guess..). I would like to
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