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" I called my mother on my cell phone."
" I called my mother from my cell phone."
Which of these two sentences is correct ?
What is the difference between the two ?
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Dear friend, The judge announced a recess is correct; in it, recess means a period of time when the proceedings of a parliament, committee, court of law, or other official body are temporarily suspended . *I can buy snacks at the school's
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Must the preposition infinitive marker 'to' be repeated in these cases? No. You can always include it or leave it out as you like. There is no rule. Most of the time you'll find that people leave it out. CJ
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Good evening, Chris, these are thought-provoking questions you have asked, and here is my opinion backed up by data from authoritative sources. 1. The possibility of tell filling the slot of talk in the example sentence seems questionable at
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Could someone please check I have the right terminology for these words I will list first the terminology I have to use, then I will write the words and the terminology I think it is in red next to each word. Most of them are simple enough but
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Hello, can you help me?
Someone wrote:
Go straight ahead Rivadavia St.
Is it correct?I would think that we say "Go straight ahead" with no other complement.
Should he write"Go straight on Rivadavia St?
Are both
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From a conversational perspective I
think it goes like this;
For the past 10 years... referring
to the entire duration.
In the past 10 years... referring
to particular points within the span.
Over the past 10 years...
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Here are my preferences: 1 In what/ which episode does she get murdered? 2 What is a crow the sy m bol of? (can you end with a preposition?) <You can, but better to avoid. "The crow is a symbol of what?"> 3 I sold it for the price
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Context will tell. The imperative is uncommon in the US, but I surely agree with MrM's definition. We'd more likely use it as part of another phrase, in which " 'round the corner" stands for "around the corner."
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Yes, a preposition, too. I knew there was something I had forgotten.
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