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Hi. In beginning paragraphes, which is copied for this inquiry, in a YAHOO! NEWS article titled "Newest US troops in dangerous region near Kabul" by JASON STRAZIUSO, dated Monday, February 16th, 2009, we can see there are some present
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
anonymous
1 yr 32 days ago
Articles, Tenses, Present Tenses, Present Perfect, Past Tenses, Paragraphs, Writing, Countries, United States, Colours, American
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This candidate had passed a {preliminary} screening within the held by the overseas scholarship selection team. Based on academic achievement (GPA) in {article missing} previous university attended, {English language ability (TOEFL or IELTS) and
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
eimai_anglos
1 yr 47 days ago
Articles, American English, Tenses, Nouns, Essays, TOEFL, IELTS, United States, American, Teaching, Qualifications, Languages, Certificates, Testing, Scholarship
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These are alternative forms of the past tense and past participle of the verb DREAM . " DREAMT " is more common in British English, and " DREAMED " in American English. Answers.com - Dictionary: Sneak v. , sneaked also snuck (
ESL Vocabulary and Idioms
by
anonymous
1 yr 95 days ago
American English, Articles, British English, Tenses, Past Tenses, Usages, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, United States, American, Languages
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Hi Goodman You wrote: I have been labeled and called by many descriptions, hinted being “Ignorant” is the first ... I'm not hinting that you're ignorant. I say that if a learner tells me "informal" means "wrong",
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
goodman
2 yr 165 days ago
Articles, American English, Verbs, Plurals, Dates, Tenses, Numbers, Present Tenses, Expressions, Subjunctives, Past Tenses, Conditionals, Writing, United States, American
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Don't say that you ever heard me tell you that people in the Land of the Free (whatever that means) lose jobs because they exercise their right to free speech, but it looks as if it's going to happen to Harvard's president pretty soon.
alt.usage.english
by
cybercypher
5 yr 34 days ago
Articles, Universities, Tenses, Difference Between, Friendships, United States, American, Usages, Speaking, Chat, Writing, Students, Speeches, Schools, Numbers
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Is it true that the word gotten was originally part ... when did it disappear (I'm assuming it is now verboten)? The last UK use of it cited in OED dates from 1894. However, I'm not at all sure that it ... uneducated) people. I certainly
uk.culture.language.english
by
matthew huntbach
5 yr 96 days ago
Articles, Dialects, Dates, Tenses, Past Tenses, British English, United States, Countries, Great Britain, Animals, Writing, American, Songs, Lyrics, Languages
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So it is true, How precisely does "no filing is required" provide evidence for "a US tax return must be filed"? The exception proves the rule. Liebs Who has lost at least one case with that argument
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Mark Brader: On the other hand, in lists of British railway stations that I've seen, that would be "Buxton (Derbyshire)" if there is another Buxton station. John Dean: That's railway stations. That's different. But who
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I have read many sources that claim that Black English (i.e. Ebonics, AAVE) is connected to West African languages. http://www.salon.com/feb97/games/verbivore970214.html ... derived from Ebonics, but that has nothing to do with any African
alt.usage.english
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bill bonde not the man who knows everything, just the man who knows
5 yr 338 days ago
Articles, American English, Dialects, Tenses, Plurals, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Colours, United States, American, Usages, Languages
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