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The story “Tears of Autumn” by Yoshiko Uchida is a great story, which the settings affect the story by many ways. This story is mostly about a young woman gone to America from Japan for freedom and marriage. The settings affect the story a lot as
ESL Essay, Writing World
by
anonymous
91 days ago
Essays, Paragraphs, Contractions, Spelling, Universities, Marriage, Literature, Relationships, Writing, Students, Asia, Countries, United States, Mistakes, Sentences
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The story “Tears of Autumn” by Yoshiko Uchida is a great story, which the settings affect the story by many ways. This story is mostly about a young woman gone to America from Japan for freedom and marriage. The settings affect the story a lot as
ESL Essay, Writing World
by
anonymous
91 days ago
Essays, Paragraphs, Contractions, Spelling, Universities, Marriage, Literature, Relationships, Writing, Students, Asia, Countries, United States, Mistakes, Sentences
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I've been studying English on my own for several years, but today, a friend of mine told me that "don't" and "doesn't" can mean the same thing, like for example: "She don't live here" "She
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
anonymous
93 days ago
Universities, Spelling, Contractions, Relationships, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Students, Friendships, Friends, Schools, Languages
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Infromation= singular Is= singular Informations=plural Are=plural Subject Verb Agreement singular subject takes singular verb vice versa to plural verb and subject The case of "All" It depends if you how will you use it. All- as group
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Which sentence is the correct one of the follow ing two sentences? I would not use the contraction because have is the main verb, not just an auxiliary. I would write, I have 15 years of experience. You can also write, I have 15 years'
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"back off" seems more likely. It means "move away (from something)".
"back up" seems less likely but is possible. Here it means "move backwards", usually said of a vehicle. So, if you wanted someone to
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I'd say that would usually be written with an apostrophe: ' twill That's not a contraction that you're likely to hear anyone use nowadays in everyday English. Click here .
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Oh my god, thousands of messages per month? Chatting when driving? Saying chat contractions aloud? Ick, and I thought *I* was addicted to internet and cell phone! Thanks for sharing, Sam.
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Hi Angliholic Yes, it means " piece of cake " (easy). However, the author apparently decided to approximate the way people actually say it in casual spoken English. The word "of" ends up sounding like "a". The same
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I was at the bar doing some trivia last night when the following question popped up. "What movie's theme song was written by Coolio?" Dangerous minds is the name of the movie. Gangster's Paradise is the name of the song. When
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How to Write a Letter Idioms Formal Letter Graduation Songs
Who sings a certain song
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