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Ant is correct. Gramatically and in general conversational English the use these prepositions are dependant more on the speakers point of view (or imagined point of view) than entrances, roads, etc.
However, mostly you have it correct:
1.
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Hi everyone,
It's great to find this website! Hope to learn more about English, esp conversational English.
Please help me to determine if the following sentences have any error and if there is, what are they and please correct them too.
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Please, help me on this. We can use the infinitive of a verb as a subject at the beginning of a sentence : “To dance is good for health”. We can also use a present participle , as a subject at the beginning of a sentence too: “Killing animals is
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Old Eladio wrote:
Could you answer to these two questions of mine, please?
First: Is there any difference in meaning between these two sentences:
a.- He doesn’t postpone answering my questions.
b.- He postpones not answering my
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Could you answer to these two questions of mine, please?
First: Is there any difference in meaning between these two sentences:
a.- He doesn’t postpone answering my questions.
b.- He postpones not answering my questions.
Second: Which
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Just received this text from a colleague of mine (he didn't give me the source). Would you say that the writer is claiming that informal/conversational English is incorrect use?
"Swan is a strong descriptivist who often classifies things
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Hello everybody!
I read many subjects on this forum to get advices in order to write my CV and it was very helpfull! Thank you for this. Unfortunately, my english is not fluent yet :-) and I need your help to read my result. Thank your for your
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I don't mean to be argumentative. I've been wrong here, and am glad to learn something when I am. Heck, just today I learned about the order of adjectives, something I had never realized was actually codified anywhere.
But I stand by "I can't
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Ruslana, you're right.
I'm just thinking about conversational English. If someone says "How have you been?" the response "I have been good" is fine. But if someone says "How are you?" usually you would respond "I'm good."
Interestingly, in
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