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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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Greetings, Tina, Mister Micawber's answers are completely relevant, but let me make some additional remarks: 1. A time of prosperity and peace - is a noun phrase you analysed absolutely correctly. In general, noun phrases may have the
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
gleb_chebrikoff
yesterday 2:43 pm
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it is still not clear to me. OK. Maybe you just need a little review about "dummy it ". In many cases, as with adjectives like important, possible, and necessary , we move the subject from the beginning to the end of the sentence,
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Hello, Chris, this clause would be an adjective clause , right? in fact, one should distinguish between relative clauses and adjective clauses , which are more precisely termed supplementive adjective clauses and represent only a special case of
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Gleb Chebrikoff, thank you for your response. It's really informative and interesting--I agree with your analysis of "tell." 3. (d; intr., tr.) ('to inform') to — about, of (he didn't want to — about the incident; — me
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Hi,
First, please tell us if you know the difference between an adjective, an adverb and a noun.
CliveD
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Hi there, I tried looking up the rules for using 'that' in a sentence. I understand it's mainly used to combine two clauses. I don't understand the specific rules though; a lot of sentences look like they'd work fine with
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Hi
The simple answer is yes, but there’s more to it than that. The verb ‘stay’ is a linking verb (aka a copular verb). What it links here is the subject (‘the paint’) with the entire sequence ’looking good for many years’ , which although
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would it be D. Conjuction. The main clause of the sentence is "it still contained helpful information"
the dependent clause is the begining of the sentence joined by the main clause by the conjuction although.
In
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Wow - an old question that's suddenly come to life again! Still; it's an interesting issue that highlights the contrast between participles used as part of a verb phrase, participles used as an adjective, and the passive voice.
The
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