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1 I have 10 gigabytes of music/ worth of music. 2 The hot water isn't on at a max at its boiling hot, so imagine if it was on the hottest. English is okay, but what you are trying to say is confused. 3 Dishwashing soap needs water to bubble./
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I hope they won't give you the wrinkles this time Too late! Everything gives me wrinkles! _______________ George used to have a statue on the mental of his apartment. ( Could "in" be natural?) mantel or mantelpiece (the shelf over
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Hi Matthew,
Why do we capitalise the first letter of the word following Dear Sir, or Madam?
Example:
Dear Sirs,
Here is my resume as requested . . .
Dear Madam,
I am pleased to accept. . . Here it's because of the
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
clive
50 days ago
Capital Letters, Resume, Pronouns, Commas, Punctuation, Curriculum Vitae, Writing, Sentences, Business, Salutations, Qualifications, Resumes
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I wonder if a comma before the word (pronoun?) "which" would be correct.-- No; the following clause is a critical part of the definition of 'enzyme'. I also think that the word in capital letters "TECHNICAL" (in brackets) means the word is
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Hi. In the Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner's English Dictionary, it has this definition for the word "enzyme," and I wonder if a comma before the word (pronoun?) "which" would be correct. Please help. I also think that the
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Hi,
i won't, it's none of my business anyway, i don't care if ronald mcdonald's your bf
i won't. it's none of my business anyway. i don't care if ronald mcdonald's your bf.
I've corrected the
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Hello Mary-- and welcome to English Forums. The only conjunction in your title is 'but'; nevertheless, I agree that the title is a little problematic to capitalize. Looks should be taken into consideration, and I think it would be better to
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What sort of help do you need? It's not a very helpfu way to title your post.
Start sentences with capital letters.
Your sentence is actually a comma splice. You should replace the comma with a period.
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Use italics, not capitalization, to indicate example sentences. I know it shoud should be WENT and not BEEN, but I dont don't know why. It's because I've been ( I have been ) is the present perfect tense, and last year is a specific
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Well, I can finally put this one to bed: In The Grammar Bible, which I love as a reference, it states that "the comma and the period go inside the closing quotation marks at all times. There are no exceptions to this rule" (Strumpf and
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
ferdis
82 days ago
Capital Letters, Commas, Punctuation, Quotation Marks, Writing, Sentences, References, Business, Career, Countries, United States, Usages, American
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