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For some reason, the writer of the second sentence felt readers needed to be reminded that 'greater than' applied to 'number.' There is nothing wrong with either; both are right. An alternative wording might have set the
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Hi Mr.Wordy,
With the name like Dimsumexpress, it's apparent that I am advertising my origin by design.
If I have to describe my English learning, I would say it's a mixed pot of AmE and BrE, with the former being a 75% influence
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
dimsumexpress
48 days ago
American English, Constructions, Clauses, Nouns, British English, Subjunctives, Spelling, Adjectives, Writing, United States, Great Britain, Websites, Usages, American, Expressions
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Hi,
is this punctuation correct? Yes, although I'm not sure if Americans normally would use a capital with 'states' in such a context. (ie S tates).
All cooperative efforts made by states and the U.S. Department of
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THE suicide-blast by a jihadist triple-agent in Afghanistan on December 30th, that killed seven American spies and one Jordanian, was a calamity for the CIA.
Above the sentence is a relative clause and that here is relative pronoun. As
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Does the following stand for: American, British and Canadian English? In English titles the initial letters of the first word and of all nouns, pronouns (except the relative 'that'), adjectives, verbs, adverbs, and subordinating
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
sevilla
57 days ago
Articles, Capital Letters, Possessives, Prepositions, Nouns, Pronouns, Adverbs, British English, Determiners, Adjectives, Writing, United States, Great Britain, American, Poetry
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Hello, would you please tell me why a plural noun(numbers) is used in the following situation?
A: It's strange because when I think of Americans, I think of white people.
Q: Yeah. Caucasians are the majority in America, but Latinos
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On the whole, this is very well written. I can polish the grammar for you, if you wish. However, it is difficult to say what might sway the examiner in her favor. The crossed-out words are my deletions of the original text and the color bar words
Essay, Report & Composition Writing
by
doctor d
60 days ago
Paragraphs, Spelling, Universities, Personal Statements, Writing, Activities, Schools, Students, United States, Careers, Business, Sentences, American, Usages
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Apologize (American spelling) is a verb. 'Apologize' has been accepted by the British as an alternative spelling of 'apologise'.
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Only one "p" but note that British and American spelling differ. Apologize (American spelling) is a verb. Apology is a noun. Apologies is a plural noun. I would like to apologize for the trouble I caused. Your apology is accepted.
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Hi, Shouldn't question 7 use the word 'practise' instead of 'practice'? If we consider the verb, ' practise ' is the British spelling and ' practice ' is the American one (look it up here:
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