We have partnered with TradePub to bring you free industry magazines and resources - no coupons or credit cards required!
Visit: englishforums.tradepub.com
-
Is this a homework assignment? In the following sentences which are the pronouns...
"Has anyone seen a pen like this ?"
Either of the two plans is acceptable to me ," said the mayor, who was smiling because she knew how good
-
Did you mean to say, "I bet you made her feel like Danny was still with her?" If you really meant "made him feel like Danny was with her " then I hope the context makes it clear who you are talking about, because the pronouns
-
Dear Homwork helper,
I need your help to solve following questions as soon as possible.
Thanks a million
Rahman
1. The phrase in bold face is a phrase fragment. Correct it by attaching it to the nearby independent clause:
-
I don't like the use of it in your first sentence. I would say: I bet after a few visits you'll find those kind of places boring. Kind is an irregular plural in that expression according to many authoritative grammarians such as Otto
-
Hi, I bet you anything you'll find it a bore after a few visits to those kind of places. Or I bet you anything you'll find it a bore after a few visits to those kinds of places and Other kinds of stuff. Or Other kind of stuff. Is
-
Hi chattt, Welcome to English Forums. Thanks for joining us. Sorry your post slipped thru the cracks. Everything you say is correct. When you ask if the sentence is "true," do you mean "is it correct?" Yes, it's correct.
Basic English Vocabulary Questions
by
avangi
14 days ago
Nouns, Pronouns, Plurals, Prepositions, Clauses, Sentences, Writing, Adjectives, Apologies, Numbers, Relative Pronouns
-
The pronoun 'I' must always be capitalized. If you don't type properly, it is impossible for us to judge what you are really asking about.
-
Hi Richie The word "it" is wrong because the word "it" should refer back to something specific. In your sentence, "a ghost" does not refer to a specific ghost, but rather to ghosts in general (i.e. any ghost).
-
-
when i I need to say "she" i I say "he" having slip of tongue, do es this ever happen to even to native speakers?? No. Very rarely, if ever. instead "tell me when he is leaving" i I may say "tell me when is he
-
Those particular slips are ones that native speakers don't usually make. The most common native slips I hear are: irregardless (not a word, it's regardless) and supposably (pronounced supposedly). Misplacing the verb isn't a big deal.
- English Test
How to Write a Letter Idioms Formal Letter Graduation Songs
Who sings a certain song
|
Ask a question right now..
|