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Should 'everyday' be 'every day' in the above sentence? True. everyday is the adjective form: everyday conversation . CJ
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Hi,
8. In the following sentence, identify the boldface word as either a conjunction or a preposition. For about the last twenty years, physicists have been analyzing chaos. (A) Yes A. preposition B. conjunction
12. Choose the
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Hi. I have 6 grammar questions need to be verified. 8. In the following sentence, identify the boldface word as either a conjunction or a preposition. For about the last twenty years, physicists have been analyzing chaos. (A) A. preposition B.
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Hey Duck, I know GG already replied your thread. I just want to make a comment. I have always been intriqued, sometimes buffled, and always feeling half full, or empty for that matterabout subjunctives . However, I feel that in your sentence,
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
dimsumexpress
17 days ago
Clauses, Subjunctives, Adjectives, Writing, Sentences, Online, Websites, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Conversational
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I wrote this to a friend--as a personal joke in a birthday card, but I had a few questions about its grammar.
Did u notice our conversation flowed like water in a stream? Then, out of nowhere, it stopped, abruptly, with no warning at
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-umm i will explains that more, some adj ending by ING like interesting and other ending by ED like interested -i know both are adj but i dont know how can i use them- hope that is clearer to you now- :) Hi, Maybe you'll find this useful.
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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tanit
62 days ago
Promotions, Learning English, Adjectives, Business, Career, Online, Websites, Students, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Conversational
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I don't think it's limited to very casual conversations any longer. M-W lists it as an adjective without a usage note or "colloq" note. Was the party fun? (I'm not sure I'd use "very fun" except quite casually
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Shouldn't it be "a lot of fun"? "very fun" sounds very ackward awkward to me... fun is sometimes used as an adjective in very casual conversation. CJ
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If you want to use tell , it's a good idea to have an indirect object after it. The following are grammatical but the first one is not often used in conversational English: 4. Possessive adjectives tell us to whom someone or something
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
cool breeze
100 days ago
Possessives, Whom, Conversational English, Adjectives, Sentences, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Conversational, Indirect, Objects
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1) whether I am right saying this (?) (adverbial, modifying uncertain?) about is left out. uncertain about whether ... The entire whether clause is the object of the missing preposition about . The whether clause is therefore a noun clause.
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
califjim
107 days ago
Prepositions, Clauses, Nouns, Questions, Adjectives, Writing, Sentences, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Conversational, Indirect
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