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Hi CJChiu, Speaking from the perspective of American English, i would say that as a noun, 'transportation' is used much more frequently than 'transport'. Transport is most often a verb. You would say: The hotel provided
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So as MrPernikety said, both are ok, and "of" can be left out in informal American English (and maybe in British English too, but I'm not sure).
Yeah, I remember Amy's advice. If my memory serves me right, she advised me to
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In American English, both are considered correct.
In fact, "beat" seems to be more popular than "beaten" in common conversational English.
I have a feeling that 'beaten' is used more when there is a physical
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In American English, both are considered correct.
In fact, "beat" seems to be more popular than "beaten" in common conversational English.
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I think have got is British and got / have alone is American. I use the later because I learned American English.
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First lesson: In American English, we capitalize "I" and "American" and "English". We don't use capital letters in the middle of words. And we spell out "please." Okay, I realize you are asking for help
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How do you pronounce those words in American English? There are basically six "R-colored vowels" in American English, represented by the sequence: Sharp thorns tear poor deer's fur. ( tear in the sense of rip ) You can look up
English Audio: Speech & Pronunciation
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califjim
32 days ago
Accents, American Accents, American English, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, United States, American, References, Business, Career
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I'm Australian, and it's always 'tanned' here. But I would contend that is what it's intended to be in American English, too. I always used to read/hear 'tanned' in American media and books, and it's only in recent
General English Vocabulary & Idiom Questions
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anonymous
64 days ago
American English, Nouns, Tenses, Past Tenses, Adjectives, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Countries, United Kingdom, United States, American, Online, Apologies, Languages
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(S)he is probably speaking with Americans in a call center. The more American sounding, the better. The three biggest problems with Indian call centers are 1. there is too much background noise 2. the phone rep is speaking way too quickly 3.
English Audio: Speech & Pronunciation
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anonymous
73 days ago
Vowels, Accents, American Accents, American English, Conversational, Speaking, Chat, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Friendships, United States, American, Languages
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Hi Alc You may have better luck in getting quick responses if you post fewer sentences in each thread. Your assumption that checking and responding to your long lists of sentences is very quick work is not the case. Are you being paid to correct
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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yankee
109 days ago
American English, Grammar, Abbreviations, Spelling, References, Business, Career, United States, Colours, Speaking, Chat, American, Friendships, Languages, Correcting
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