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I'm a high school student taking college courses in spanish and love learning new languages. Im looking for a native spanish speaker to practice my conversational skills and I'd love to help someone practice their english.
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I thought you said you hadn't eaten yet. But it seems as tho haven't can also be used? No? Is this correct? I would say that it's not. There's been some water under the bridge since your earlier conversation, and you may have
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Hi Clive,
Thanks for taking the time on my query. I guess what I had in mind when I used "had taken computer science for 2 semesters.." rather than the simple "took" was the deliberate intent to emphasize the duration I had
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Since there is no direct time frame specified, one can only assume that this conversation has come to past. Based on the logic process going in my head, as far as C's reason for being late is concerned, I would say this:
" The reason
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Hi,
Situation: We (A and B) are waiting for a friend (C). Is the underlined I see no underlining expression okay in the above situation?
A: We've been waiting for C for a long time. OK B: I don't know what has happened to C. keeps
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
clive
12 days ago
Tenses, Past Tenses, Relationships, Writing, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Friends, Conversational, Underlining, Expressions
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Situation: We (A and B) are waiting for a friend (C). Is the underlined expression okay in the above situation? A: We've been waiting for C for a long time. B: I don't know what happened to C. A: I can't wait any longer. I have to go
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What you're saying is that it really doesn't matter which one to use? That's right. Both are in the category of casual speech, and it doesn't matter which you use. You can use one of them in the morning and the other in the
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Female speech is typically cooperative, reciprocal and collaborative .
How do should I understand these three? They cooperate, reciprocate, and collaborate. That is, each helps the other to keep the conversation going, each allows the other
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when I click the ESL chat tab new page is displayed where other tabs are seen. I'm lost in this page. I even clicked one of the categories from the Chat rooms but the same page is displayed. I don't see anyone online or having live
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I understand that "I've gotta ~" and "I gotta ~" both mean "I have got to ~," and both are quite common in colloquial terms. Now my question is, which one of them is actually more frequently used in your everyday
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