-
my analytic abilities(,) which are important for an accountant. In my opinion, a construction like this, with a possessive adjective and a relative clause, is quite unusual, especially when the relative clause is restrictive. I don't see why,
-
There are many examples of poor grammar, punctuation and vocabulary on the internet, so you must be wary when using Google to find answers. The possessive form (3 month s' time) is the correct practice. 'The time' = 3 months; it is 3 months'
-
1 The killers who were after the girl intercepted the police car she was in on her way to the safe house and recaptured her. (is INTERCEPT the word?) Yes and no. It would work if the tables were turned. "The police intercepted the killers and
-
Dear friend, 1 I saw the advertismentin in a newspaper yesterday. I saw the advertisment in a yesterday`s newspaper. This is my correction. - Advertisement, and not *advertisment. Besides, there is no need to put a space after the apostrophe
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
gleb_chebrikoff
92 days ago
Possessives, Punctuation, Spelling, Apostrophes, Genders, Determiners, Relationships, Writing, Sentences, Context, Friendships, Mistakes, Friends
-
Hi again,
I am about to complete all sentences, however, little confusion occurs in my this old posted sentence-- subject-verb agreement.
It seems their advertising work has been affected by the lack of team collaboration among their top
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
clive
94 days ago
Verbs, Singular Verbs, Plurals, Possessives, Tenses, Clauses, Present Tenses, Present Perfect, Writing, Sentences, Singular
-
The correct form for the subject of a gerund clause has been a matter of debate for years. The traditional answer is that the possessive form is the correct one: without your having to ... Nevertheless, you will hear and see the other version
-
No, no apostrophe in the 1600s . The apostrophe is a possessive marker, not a plural marker. It is grudgingly approved only in a very limited number of cases which would otherwise look confusing, as in this: mind your p's and q's .
-
No possessive punctuation . that of takes care of the possessive.
-
Please try to do a little work yourself first: look in your dictionary and read about forming possessives . Post your list here and we will check it. And be careful of your spelling.
-
THERE: — adv.
1. in or at that place (opposed to here ): She is there now.
2. at that point in an action, speech, etc.: He stopped there for applause.
3. in that matter, particular, or respect: His anger was justified there.
4. into
- English Test
How to Write a Letter Idioms Formal Letter Graduation Songs
Who sings a certain song
|
Ask a question right now..
|