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Hi, I was asked this question by a friend who speaks English as a second language but I don't know the answer. Looking at the following two sentences: 1. If it rain s this afternoon, I'll get wet. 2. Should it rain this afternoon,
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Hi all,
I teach ESL and I had a student as me a question that I wasn't sure how to answer. He constructed a sentence and this is what is was: "My stomach does not feel good." Now he knew to use DOES not...but asked me why we
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Here's my wild guess: I think it begins with "And I have to get it on...." MM is right. It's pretty darn unintelligible. That machine would get an extremely bad score in the speaking section of a standardized ESL test, such as
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Hi, Please have a look at these two threads: Quotation letter How to write a quotation letter Once you've finished reading, write a draft based on the examples provided there, and post it in the ESL, Formal, General & Business Letter
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How would you explain it to an ESL student?
I would explain it this way: native speakers use "have" in that case.
Some things better be learned by heart. You can take my word for it.
To search for the right
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How would you explain it to an ESL student?
Could you help me with the following sentence?
"HAVE is linked to Couple and not A COUPLE"
what I'm trying to say is that it's liked to COUPLE and not the fact
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I think we should keep the discussion in the context of "english as a second language". I think idioms can be very difficult for the individual whose native tongue is not English. It can be very difficult to teach the meaning of these
Video and Distance Learning
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anonymous
107 days ago
Countries, United Kingdom, Students, Conversational, Languages, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Careers, Business, Jokes, ESL, Speeches, Context, Idioms
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a question from my adult ESL class - there are 4 common kinds of compound modifiers, 1. number + noun, 2. noun + present participle, e.g. a prize-winning film 3. noun + past participle, e.g. a stress-related issue, and 4. adjective + past
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to be= Verb. Active present infinitive complete with to . In some grammar books written for ESL students in non-English speaking countries it is sometimes called the first infinitive. CB
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
cool breeze
108 days ago
Sentences, Countries, United States, United Kingdom, Great Britain, ESL, Usages, Students, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Languages
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