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According to Newbury House Dictionary of American English, "service" is an uncountable noun when it means the care of a machine to keep it in good working order: When our oven broke, we called a repairman for service . According to
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My versions are not the only correct ones. They are simply what I might say to communicate what you have written. He has so many ways of dressing. He doesn't have the same style/look all the time. Sometimes he's classy, others he's
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Could you help me with this please? 1 He has so many ways of dressing. He doesn't have the same style/look all the time. Sometimes he's classy, others he's got a dirty look to him. He can dress classily just as he can dress
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Does everything have to be in full sentences? I mean African Americans have their own English lingos and they can describe a whole paragraph in a few words. What's the difference between Black English and Standard American English?
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Hello,
Can anyone explain what this sentence means? Especially the word strain. In what sense is it used here? and "it" in "straining it..." refers to what?
But even with training programs by American lawyers and
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I wrote by myself, so it might have a lot of grammar mistakes...I really need your help,any proffesor check my grammar, sentence,pls. I could tell that my friend was excited by the looks of her face. Natalie was going in for the talent
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
madxmag
147 days ago
Grammar, Tenses, Past Tenses, Arts, Relationships, Writing, Sentences, United States, American, Friendships, Mistakes, Friends, Languages, Correcting, Music
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Hi There's no need for confusion. It's very simple. Normally we say: I was you were he/she/it was we were you were they were But Beyonce sings ' if I were a boy...'. --> What she sings is also correct. If I were president,
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(1) I feel embarrassed when we go out because my clothes are so cheap (inexpensive) compared with his (expensive clothes). (2) My salary is very low. = I don't earn much. (3) You have no taste in clothes. = You don't know how to choose
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I perceive no real difference in meaning. The use of should may be a little old-fashioned in that sentence and I think it is mostly used by elderly Britons these days. I don't think many Americans use it at all. CB
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Ok, one more sentence:
After a year of dispiriting losses in the Pacific, the landings allowed Roosevelt to say the fight was now being taken to the Axis. Americans could — and did — rally to that news, as well as to news of victories
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