We have partnered with TradePub to bring you free industry magazines and resources - no coupons or credit cards required!
Visit: englishforums.tradepub.com
-
This is too hard! I still don't get it. :(
I will look for more example. I hope this site helps me- http://tillyer.net/GLOW/fsi201.htm
That's what we doing in class
The problem is that the instruction "Change the
-
Hi Eddie The problem with your sentences is that because you did not add something such as "He asked" or "She wanted to know" at the beginning of the indirect question, you have incomplete sentences. Look at my corrections and
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
yankee
205 days ago
Tenses, Simple Past, Whom, Past Tenses, Questions, Sentences, Speaking, Speeches, Simple Tenses, Conversational, Indirect, Affirmatives
-
B: There's a soccer game on this evening that I want to watch. (I'm not sure if you're supposed to shift the tenses to past.) He says there is a soccer game on this evening tht he wants to watch. He said there was a soccer game on
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
avangi
205 days ago
Tenses, Present Tenses, Past Perfect, Past Tenses, Direct Questions, Football, Questions, Speaking, Speeches, Conversational, Indirect, Sports
-
Hi Eddie Your exercise would be easier to do (and would probably also make more sense to you) if you knew who had actually asked the question. As Avangi mentioned, if you don't know that, you will have to invent something. When you report a
-
Sometimes the direct question includes a statement about the person who asked it: The teacher was angry. She said, "John, why don't you ever bring your homework to class?" You could make this into an indirect question this way:
-
Lately, I've been questioning if there really is enough of a semantic importance with tense in a present flowing narrative. An example:
There was a house, set in a forest amassed with foliage. Around that house, a fury of ornaments
-
These all look OK to me, apart from "When did you realise that you are an adult?", which would almost always be better as "When did you realise (that) you were an adult?". There are also some potentially dubious uses of the
-
2 whether used as a function word usually with correlative or or with or whether to indicate (1) until the early 19th century a direct question involving alternatives; (2) an indirect question involving stated or implied alternatives <decide
-
Hi, I have a question regarding the use of question marks.
In the following text do we infact need question marks? They are indirect questions are they not? ** ** ** I would appreciate it if you could send me more information about to where the
-
Contesting is the correct word. When you use debating , that means two people are airing two viewpoints about it, questioning means they haven't taken an action against it. When you contest a will , you are taking an action by challenging it.
- English Test
How to Write a Letter Idioms Formal Letter Graduation Songs
Who sings a certain song
|
Ask a question right now..
|