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Hi friends,
I learnt that in English we use "WHO" for God and human being whereas "WHICH" is used for animals, plants and non living things. If its fine then please review the conversation below and advise:
Tom: What
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You should be able to understand these if you hear someone use them, but you probably shouldn't try to copy them (unless you want your English to sound sloppy), and please don't use them in writing (unless you are recording the
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Hi chiliblossom!
My nickname is Beto . I'm from Brazil and I was biology teacher,driver, businessman and other few other things without much success. And nowadays I only learning English by myself and I am doing temporary works. I had
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beto_somm
21 days ago
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The meaning is identical. The version with "got" is lower register - casual conversation.
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Thanks, Amy. Is there any situation the question form is preserved? I remember a thread somewhere in this forum discussed this but I don't know how to find it.
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They are fine in casual conversation.
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Hi Pter Yes, it's an indirect question, so the usual wording would be Please ask him what his preference is . The sentence itself is a command, not a question, in which the speaker instructs the listener to say this to a third person (i.e.
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Is this an indirect question and which one is correct? Please ask him what is his preference? Please ask him what his preference is. Thank you very much.
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Please actually ask a question or make a request instead of posting disconnected phrases. Here is an example of a question: How can I change "She is writing a letter" from active to passive voice? Thank you. Here is an example of a
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1) okay. (Or you could omit "if I'm" both times.) 2) I wish there were a device you could point at people and you'd know their nationality/know where they were from. ("Was" is also quite common, though not really
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