We have partnered with TradePub to bring you free industry magazines and resources - no coupons or credit cards required!
Visit: englishforums.tradepub.com
-
Hi, I think it'd be better if these questions were asked in the audio section of this forum, maybe. There might be interesting things to discuss, and they don't belong here in the grammar section, I think. Anyway, I listened to this one,
-
1 There was too much sauce for the meat , which is why we added onions. 2 She's known under the alias/pseudonym "..". 'Alias' is for criminals; 'pseudonym' is for authors. 3 The duration of the song was... (can you say duration of a song?-- Yes )
-
Which is it? 1 There was too much sauce in relation/in comparison/in proportion to the meat, which is why we added onions to make up for the less meat. 2 She's known under the alias/pseudonym ".." 3 The duration of the song was...
-
Because you need quotation maaaaarks!!! Geez! When you hear a line in a song, search the net with Google , and type something like: "I'll be there waiting for you" Looking through the lyrics, it doesn't take long to see what you
-
Im trying 2 find a song, its buggin me! i keep typing it in on youtube and all that comes up is bryan adams and richard marx but its not that song.
At the end of teh song it goes, 'ohh il be there waiting for you, ohh il be there waiting
-
I cant find a song and its buggin me
at the end it continously goes, ohh il be there, waiting for you, ohh ill be there waiting for you. and its country ish i think.. any ideas??
-
First of all, thanks for the fast answer.
Secondly, I still don't understand: is it correct (from the grammatical aspect) to use "killing" on that line or maybe, like you said, this is a need of the poet to use specifically this
-
The first thing to remember is that songs do not necessarily follow all the rules of grammar or use standard vocabulary, so you need to be careful about using them as examples. Additionally it's also sometimes difficult to interpret a single
-
On the song "Remedy" of Little Boots there is a line that says: "No more poison killing my emotion". Is the word "killing" appropriate here, or the more appropriate verb should be "kills" (in present
-
I've looked through them and some look iffy, could you just quickly go through them, I've made it clear and double spaced. Put a OK next the the ones that are fine and some have alternatives. If you don't mind. thank you 1 I asked
- English Test
How to Write a Letter Idioms Formal Letter Graduation Songs
Who sings a certain song
|
Ask a question right now..
|