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I would choose C. I can see the possibility of both A and D. The sentence is poorly designed, with two ' hardly 's. All in all, a poor question.
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Observing the concentration in his eyes, you _____ imagine that Kern, a man who can hardly see, wrote each song completely by ear. (A) can hardly (B) hardly could (C) would hardly (D) will hardly
The given answer is (A). I was wondering if C
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Hi Doll,
Calm down Jackson. You will find the answer you want in the end. If you don't want any other person to answer your posts, please add " teachers reply only" .And what is wrong with learning other sides of point? I think it is a
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Q Once I saw a person who typed the sentence "I will meet you very the soon". Is the usage of definite article correct in the above mentioned sentence in quotation?
No. It should be 'very soon' Q What is the difference between 'especially'
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Q Once I saw a person who typed the sentence "I will meet you very the soon".
Is the usage of definite article correct in the above mentioned sentence in quotation?
Q What is the difference between 'especially' and 'specially'?
Q What are
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No '-s' when there is a helping verb: I/you/it should arrive . Your question is correctly formed, though.
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Dear All,
I once read:
"be=is/am/are" can be used as a linking verb. As we can link 'the subject' with Noun, Adjective and Location.
1- I am Lrk.
2- I was happy.
3- I am upstairs.
and this is the case with "have/has/had".
but
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Thanks Doll for interrupting lol.
I would like review item number 3:
3. Which one is correct:
a. How many people do usually live in a Japanese house ?--ok.
b. How many people usually live in a Japanese house?
You said it was okay to
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Ah, I see. Depending on the tenses, there are different set of rules applied to each of these helping verbs (hv) and their forms: have , do , and be . For hv that are a form of do , the rule is that the main verb has to be in base form, like you
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Jackson6612 wrote:
I have started hating you.
In the above sentence:
I = subject
have = helping verb
started = main verb
hating = noun
you = object
Am I correct?
Hi Jackson,
In reference to “hate” and
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