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Raja, let me make a number of essential clarifications: 1. ' Hence , that the 'do'-construction in "Who went to the park?" is not possible or at least less preferable (which of the two is it in your opinion?) in "Who
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
gleb_chebrikoff
10 days ago
Constructions, Clauses, Pronouns, Adverbs, Intonations, Relationships, Writing, Sentences, Context, Speaking, Friendships, Speeches, Friends, Numbers
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Hi there, I tried looking up the rules for using 'that' in a sentence. I understand it's mainly used to combine two clauses. I don't understand the specific rules though; a lot of sentences look like they'd work fine with
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i would like to know two things. the first one is : the past participle of the verb "go", is it "been"? ex: i have been to London. have you ever been to London? i think that "go" in this case has irregular form
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
ericsteef
11 days ago
Simple Present, Prepositions, Tenses, Adverbs, Present Tenses, Universities, Present Perfect, Relationships, Sentences, Students, Friendships, Friends, Simple Tenses, Schools
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Hi,
Do you mean an adverb?
An adjective is a word that describes/modifies a noun, pronoun, etc.
Clive
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Both positions are correct. You can put completely adverb after the subject (you) or at the end of the sentence. CB
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My English textbook says that “very much” or “very many” is not used as a quantifier. (I know than “very much” is used as an adverb.) What do you use to increase “much” or “many”? In these examples I’d like to say that there is not just much/ many
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Hi,
Both are grammatically correct, but only number 1. is an adjective.
1 . He is fast. (fast is an adjectival Complement )
2 . The actor is backstage. (backstage is an Adverbial )
Here's the reason: The verb
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But I still think the word "backstage" in the sentence "The actor is backstage" is an adverb. You are right. - CB
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Both are correct. He is fast -- fast is an adjective describing a quality of the man. (He is a fast runner.) The actor is backstage -- backstage is a noun (backstage is a place where the actor is located).
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I'd agree that the sentence isn't written very well, but I guess people probably wouldn't have too much trouble understanding it. The word "difficulty" is a noun, not an adverb. The way I see it, the phrase "have
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