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After neither of+noun/pronoun ,we use a singular verb in a formal style. - Neither of my sisters is married. In an informal style,you can use a plural verb. - Neither of my sisters are married. And your question:Neither can be used alone without
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Hi,
Regarding "support once question", I want to use this phrase for BBS. Sometimes you find a good topic in a BBS, and support the topic starter. Can I post " Supporting once" or " Support once" ?
I
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In my terminology what is a relative pronoun which is inclusive of the antecedent in your sentence. A leading figure in the Scottish enlightenment, Adam Smith's two major books are to democratic capitalism what Marx's Das Kapital is to
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Why is A both inserted into the sentence and also listed among the choices? The test is not an official one, and the question is poorly designed. While D is the best choice stylistically, A, C and E are all grammatically possible though
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Dear teachers, This is a GMAT sentence correction problem. Unlike the original National Museum of Science and Technology in Italy, where the models are encased in glass or operated only by staff members, the Virtual Leonardo Project, an online
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Words --- yes! I was focused upon whether 'are' could be used for the relative pronoun 'what.' It is, isn't it, when 'what' means more than one entity? Hiro
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Interesting question. I know exactly what you mean. But although the three words you list are pronouns, all of the "indefinite pronoun lists" that Google turns up fail to include any of them. So I guess they're not called
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That we can't tell you due to lack of context.
What we can tell you, though, is that you should capitalize the pronoun "I" at all times.
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He is a personal pronoun and we do not use adjective clause to modifyi it. It is not that we never use a relative clause with a personal pronoun, but it is not common, and it is usually associated with special styles of writing, such as poetry.
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"Their" is a possessive adjective. You use it when you want to say that something belongs to something else, like, "their website" (the website belongs to them) It is a kind of universal pronoun, not commonly used to refer to
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