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"extraordinary" is an adjective and therefore doesn't take an article. http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/540/01/
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Hi. When do we use the indefinite article "an" before the word "extraordinary"? In a religious context, what could be the deciding factor for using the phrase "possess extraordinary power" versus using the phrase
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
anonymous
155 days ago
Articles, Vocabulary, Nouns, Uncountable Nouns, Idioms, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Indefinite, Context, Languages
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Hi,
The following sentence is by a native English speaker. I feel that there should be an article before ‘stabilized occupancy’. I know that ‘occupancy’ is a non-countable noun, however it seems the author is trying to be specific with
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I think this article basically has sound grammar and a natural tone. I made a few A few minor suggestions for comparison. Hope it helps .
William Caxton introduced printing in to England around 1477 ( no comma) when he set up his press in
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what a long sentence... there're 38 words before the ","
what's your expertise? I searched " dominant predictor " on Google, and got only 25 results (with the "Search Lanaguage" set to my mother language -
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You need a lot more articles than you have! The people of Afghanistan have defeated Alexander the Great, the Mongols, the United Kingdom, and the Soviet Union, and they might defeat the United States as well. CJ
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Hi, Clive
Call me Mr Obvious, but I think Mr Anon (unbeknownst to him) just did make a sentence that contains all the English articles . Now it's up to you to correct it.
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Thanks, samwalker and mister micawber for the topic and
the answer... I am writing an article about Filipinisms for our english subject... i do wonder who started using the term "Filipinism". it's really very degrading and
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American-English was British-English, except that it was altered significantly by all of the various influences (immigrants/languages from other countries) that learned to speak it in America. Everyone in the UK knows how to communicate in English
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
anonymous
168 days ago
Articles, British English, Dialects, Spelling, Learning English, Pronunciation, Writing, United States, Great Britain, Students, Speaking, American, Teaching, Languages, Expressions
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Hi. When reading a piece of text, I sometimes see words that seem uncountable used countably. I have come to realize (if I learned it correctly) -- mainly through these forums -- that an uncountably noun could be used countably if it is used as an
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