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I have seen people saying this in movies. what does it means a "damn thing"? Under what situation can you say this sentence. Will I get myself in trouble if I say this in an office environment? Thank you -ESL student "Damn" is
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I have seen people saying this in movies. what does it means a "damn thing"? Under what situation can you say this sentence. Will I get myself in trouble if I say this in an office environment? Thank you -ESL student
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} }>They presented four phrases and asked me which one was correct: } }>(flag#1 = red/white/blue; flag#2 = green/yellow) } }>1. The two flags were red, white and blue and green and yellow. }>2. The two flags were red, white and blue,
alt.usage.english
by
r j valentine
6 yr 11 days ago
Numbers, Commas, Intonations, Colons, Mistakes, Colours, Jobs, Speaking, Writing, Careers, Punctuation, Speeches, Languages, Semicolons, ESL
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on 02 Nov 2003: I assume that when people ask for advice about how to write or say something, they want formal advice, or advice for formal occasions. But why should you assume that? People often, when they ask for advice, describe the context in
alt.usage.english
by
cybercypher
6 yr 19 days ago
Expressions, Constructions, Conditionals, Context, Countries, Relationships, Friendships, Asia, Speaking, Chat, Friends, Apologies, Conversational, Auxiliaries, ESL
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(. . .) The formulation "Queen (or Duke) so-and-so" never ... the title of a particular named person (a proper noun). If we want to give advice, especially in this newsgroup, to someone who seems to be an ESL (= EFL ... Elizabeth's
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If we want to give advice, especially in this newsgroup, to someone who seems to be an ESL (= EFL ... Queen Elizabeth's husband that's equivalent tothe prenominal title "Queen" is "Prince", and in his case it's used
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(. . .) The formulation "Queen (or Duke) so-and-so" never takes the definite article; the title is the title of a particular named person (a proper noun). If we want to give advice, especially in this newsgroup, to someone who seems to
alt.usage.english
by
quentin burward
6 yr 25 days ago
Articles, Nouns, Marriage, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Relationships, Students, Languages, Definite Articles, ESL
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on 26 Oct 2003: From the U. of Northern Florida's Web edition of the Spinnaker The line above is the only line in my post that I wrote myself. All other characters on the page were copied verbatim (cut and pasted) from the Web, including, of
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How to Write a Letter Idioms Formal Letter Graduation Songs
Who sings a certain song
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