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I still have difficulty using the
indefinite article.
1.
There are two banks near my house. I use
both of them.
If I am on my way to one of the banks and somebody
asks me where I am going, what should I say?
1) I'm
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a. It is a two hour drive from to . b. It is a two hour's drive from to . c. It is a two-hour drive from to . C. is the best alternative. A. is fine with me but some may object to the lack of a hyphen. As Mr M has said, the sentence is
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
cool breeze
226 days ago
Articles, Plurals, Nouns, Punctuation, Genitives, Hyphenation, Sentences, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Indefinite, Languages
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Hello this is a new revised version following AlpheccaStars's advises, if anybody can give me an opinion,or how to make it better I will APRECIATE it very much. answering to the previous AlpheccaStars's advise for : "I am writing to
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
michael1stay
228 days ago
Articles, IELTS, Cover Letter, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Indefinite, Asia, Korea, Qualifications, Languages, Certificates, Testing
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. 1. Is it correct (natural?) to put the indefinite article "a" in front of something that looks like a superlative to make it one of many (as it seems)?-- Yes, sometimes; I wouldn't overdo it. A most effective way of helping them to
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1. Is it correct (natural?) to put the indefinite article "a" in front of something that looks like a superlative to make it one of many (as it seems)?
A most effective way of helping them to become familiar is ...
2. Can you think
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Welcome to the forums. First, I will answer your question. A cover letter is a one-page very short introduction to a subject. Every cover letter has one or more attached detailed documents. Think of it like the cover of a book - The cover has the
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
alpheccastars
229 days ago
Articles, IELTS, Cover Letter, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Indefinite, Asia, Korea, Letters, Qualifications, Languages, Certificates, Testing
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I would like to know whether the chemical elements in formulas are read as syllables or letter by letter. I must write "SiO2 film" with the indefinite article, and I don't know whether it must be "a" (in case the formula is
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Hi. When do you have to put the definite article "the" in front of names of associations and conferences? I think these are all possible but I think no. 3 is most prevalent in terms of popularity. Let's pretend the word
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Hi, eunjinny. I believe the indefinite article "a" should be omitted. To the best of my knowledge, both expressions carry the same meaning. "the condition of employment" "the condition of being employed" also, the
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Thank you, but I'm a little confused. Mr. Micawber, I suppose you live in Japan. Probably you realize that the English definite and indefinite articles are very difficult to Japanese people Let me propose the following hypothesis: Hypothesis
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