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Hi Cute572 The word "that" is a relative pronoun in your sentence. It refers back to "report" and it introduces a defining relative clause . The word "he" is the subject of the clause.
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Hello Gleb, Thank you, again, for your answer! Let me say from the outset, that I am neither a native speaker, nor an expert in linguistics, but nonetheless interested, so please forgive me that I am not as well-versed as far as technical terms
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Usually you can't use WILL in a WHEN clause. so whenever would be the same thing. I'd say I'll come to your house and find you whenver you're hiding.
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I will do whatever he asks me to to do. I would use this one (as corrected). This whatever structure is similar to a conditional structure with if . The if clause does not contain will . Likewise for the whatever clause. I will do whatever he
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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
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gleb_chebrikoff
8 days ago
Constructions, Clauses, Pronouns, Adverbs, Intonations, Relationships, Writing, Sentences, Context, Speaking, Friendships, Speeches, Friends, Numbers
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It is the object of the verb. Verb objects are nouns, noun phrases or noun clauses. Ergo, it is a gerund (an '-ing' verb form acting as a noun.) (This conversation started HERE .)
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Thank you very much,
For three, if we were to leave out the first clause and only said
Whether he is as gentleman like when he loses as when he wins has yet to be proven.
Whether he is as big a gentleman when he loses as when he
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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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Hi
There's really very little difference, but I'd use 2A and 2b because the first clause in each is more compact.
Forget any implication you may perceive about the book having been already transferred to Mary. There is no
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None of these are clear. Say, instead: We might put your application on hold until we receive the rest of the information we requested.
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