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PLEASE IF ANYONE CAN HELP ME PLEASE DO THIS IS DUE TOMOROW IT ISONLY A SMALL PART BUT THIS PART IS ALL I NEED IF YOU CAN HELP WITH ANYTHING WORDING ECT. PLEASE DO THANK YOU The next argument I am going to touch on is one of the most well known,
ESL Essay, Writing World
by
tom12345678910
348 days ago
Accents, American Accents, American English, Articles, Abbreviations, Antonyms, Apostrophes, Adverbs, Analogies, Accusative, Application Letters, Adjuncts, Abstract Nouns, Apology Letters, Affirmative Sentences
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In this essay I am about to touch on the existence of God. There is not yet an entirely proven yes or no answer to this mind blowing question, that is why in this essay I cannot possible answer if God exists or not. Instead I will try my best to
ESL Essay, Writing World
by
tom12345678910
352 days ago
Articles, Capital Letters, Abbreviations, Clauses, British English, Colons, Affirmative Sentences, Business English, Antonyms, Accusative, Abstract Nouns, CELTA, Analogies, Application Letters, American Accents
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I think it depends on what variety you want to teach. For American English, the simple guidelines I follow are: When "have" is not an auxiliary verb, it behaves like all other verbs, and so you need don't / doesn't to make it
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Hehe, that's exactly what I was looking for, thanks Jim. But... I see it seems to be very complex, and so I doubt I will be able to think of a rule of thumb. It just seems idiomatic to do so in certain situations, but not in others. Another
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Could I use sentences like: (could for possibility in affirmative sentences and questions) It could rain next week. Could it rain next week? Where could it rain next week? When could it rain? Are they all corrct?
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Hello, In affirmative sentences, we use " has " when the subject is " he/she/it ". " She " and " he " can replace a proper name (" John ", " Mary "), while " it " can replace a
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Hi, I would like to know how to change this negative sentence "You have no idea how tired they are at times" to an affirmative sentence. Please correct me.
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Hi pjyrdo Here are my comments: 1. The word order is not the most natural. The time aspect is more typical at the end: "I don't know what I should do for three hours." 2. 'In three hours' is frequently used to refer to a
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Thanks, Clive. I have another sentence written as indirect speech that I wish to verify: 'I said that so do I'. Do you think I can write so or should I write 'I said that I do so'?
In case of affirmative sentences like 'So
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I learned that "far" is not used alone in affirmative sentences. You can use "so far" though (I'm not sure about "very far"). The hotel is a long way. The hotel is so far. The hotel is not far. Is the hotel far?
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