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The word "I" is always capitalised. Sentences begin with a capital letter and end with a period (or question mark or exclamation mark).
Some of the commas I've suggested are not mandatory. I just feel they help make the
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
mr wordy
109 days ago
Capital Letters, Commas, Punctuation, Question Marks, Exclamation Marks, Relationships, Writing, Sentences, Countries, United Kingdom, Colours, Friendships, Friends, Languages, Refinancing
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You need periods or, as appropriate, question marks at the end of all your sentences. The word "I" is always capitalised. Do not imagine that capitalisation and punctuation are unimportant. If you care at all about writing properly then
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You need periods or, as appropriate, question marks at the end of all your sentences. The word "I" is always capitalised. Do not imagine that capitalisation and punctuation are unimportant. If you care at all about writing properly then
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END ALL SENTENCES WITH A PERIOD (FULL STOP), A QUESTION MARK, OR AN EXCLAMATION MARK. 1 We've been walking in circles for the past hou r. I've already seen this house twice .-- period, not comma 2 This blue hat/pencil/one is the same one I had
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No. 1
M: Where's the stack of folders that was/were on my desk? -- by itself, "on my desk" implies that the folders are on the desk now (and not in the cabinet). In conversation, many people would say "were" rather
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
mr wordy
120 days ago
Punctuation, Question Marks, Business, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Careers, Conversational, Apologies, Languages
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I don't believe I've ever heard this one!
Well, I think there may be some differences here -- I was a bit puzzled actually by your question mark against For days I have been willing it to be true. To me, this sentence is OK. Kind of
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Hai every body...i have some question here..
I have been discuss with my friends about how to reply when people say to you "how do you do?"
Then they said you should reply how do you do again...so, it a big question mark in
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Yes. In fact, I prefer the sentence without that comma.*
While we're talking about punctuation, your question isn't punctuated correctly. You are joining two independent clauses with a comma. This is known as a "comma
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Would you say "You're as slow as me?" or "You're as slow as I am?"
I believe the poster is following the American convention for the use of quotes.
I assume you'd agree that the first question mark is
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I believe the poster is following the American convention for the use of quotes.
I assume you'd agree that the first question mark is superfluous, but is the American convention really to put the final question mark inside the quotes? I
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