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Hi, again. This is an extract of a reader's digest in which 'the' and 'a' are used. I can't quite pin down why the isresent in most of this paragraph because from what i know we use 'a' to introduce new objects and
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Hi CalifJim,
I'm sorry I have this question from one thread which is similiar to my "in and of with the subfolders" question. I have mulled a while but still don't understand why one is "in" and the other is
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megan117
34 days ago
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Dear friend, Basically, any sentence consists of two parts. They are complete subject and complete predicate. Complete subject is the part of the sentence which names what is talked about, in your case, it is trains. The part which tells what is
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Hi,
Do these sentences mean that a person would have taken only these two exams or more two?
1. She had always enjoyed history classes at school and it was one of the subjects she passed at exams. French was another. No. There could be
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Do these sentences mean that a person would have taken only these two exams or more two? 1. She had always enjoyed history classes at school and it was one of the subjects she passed at exams. French was another. 2. She had always enjoyed history
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hello i'm a foreigner in china n want to give a TOEFL or GRE exams hereitself. first, are there any cities in the south of china like hainan,guangzhou etc where they hold TOEFL or GRE courses? thanx
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Also would you say these are correct in both tenses?
If you have lost/lost your book, please see Jim. Both are grammatically correct, but have lost is better when you consider that you're combining it with the advice about seeing Jim
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Hi,
No + gerund is probably the simplest and clearest approach.
Clive
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Hi. Let us suppose that someone is trying to write classroom instructions. Would you provide some help on that?
Would you say we can use the word "no" in front of a gerund phrase (I think it is) below?
No playing the trumpet
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