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does this sentence need a comma or more?
They are overall mottled light grey with a pink bill.
thanks, Darcy
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When I was taking an undergraduate communications course, it struck me how much the technology has developed and how far-reaching its impact has been.
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I remember the day that he came.
We aren’t going for the simple reason that we can’t afford it.
Is 'that' used as an adverb in the above sentences ? In the first sentence that is indeed adverbial in character, which is obvious if we
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Sentences like yours occur frequently in spoken English when people start saying something without having thought out every detail in advance. Normally, in written language anyway, the subject comes first: The tests are a good challenge, pushing
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Avoid using incorrect English if you can.
which one is correct form of the sentence ?
which hasn't yet come true - and which hasn't come true yet
Both are relative clauses and both can be correct with the correct main
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John has lost his job and he is forced to sell his house. This meaning of the sentence should be self-explanatory.
So John put a sign in front of the house which says " for sale" by owner with his phone number on it.
Mary saw the
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I'm having trouble with these sentences.
1 Sit on the suitcase for the time of the song. By the you'll have flattened it out.
2 I ate my food in the time she stood in line and order. She stood on/in the longest slowest line. By
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I remember the day that he came.
We aren’t going for the simple reason that we can’t afford it. Why do you think "that" might be an adverb in those two sentences, Debpriya De? The word "that" is very often used as a relative
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" Truth be told , I fell asleep in the middle of her talk. "
Does this sentence have the same meaning as "To tell the truth, I fell asleep in the middle of her talk."
What is the phrase "Truth be told " known as
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I remember the day that he came.
We aren’t going for the simple reason that we can’t afford it.
Is 'that' used as an adverb in the above sentences ?
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