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it sounds fine, however, I would change the comma and would use a relative clause:
In 1990, in a town called Tortosa, was founded the Special Education School "Gloria S." which shared different spaces and activities with the
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Using the same sentence, but in the present tense A prepositional phrase acting as an adverb modifying the nonfinite verb 'using' in that nonfinite clause...which I presume is attached by a comma to a main clause which you have not supplied.
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Hello
Definitely not. Forget about what word class ‘which’ belongs to. The important thing is that the second clause in each of your sentences is subordinate, not main; consequently, comma splicing (of run-on sentences) is not an
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
billj
49 days ago
Prepositions, Clauses, Nouns, Noun Phrases, Commas, Punctuation, Determiners, Adjectives, Writing, Sentences, Phrases
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Ferdis,
By now, it's obvious that we have a different approach toward adverbial. I would summarize our viewpoints like this:
Mary's new adress is beautiful. Beautiful- is adjectival.
Yes, but don't go there; this is a
Linguistics Discussion Forum
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ferdis
52 days ago
Constructions, Prepositions, Difference Between, Clauses, Adverbs, Punctuation, Commas, Writing, Adjectives, Sentences, Online, Websites
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Cooking dinner - doesn't modify "kitchen". It modified the whole main clause.
According to me, it (cooking dinner) is simply a participle phrase functioning as an adjective modifying 'mother'. Because it modifies
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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dimsumexpress
70 days ago
Present Progressive, Prepositions, Clauses, Adverbs, Present Continuous, Present Tenses, Commas, Punctuation, Adjectives, Writing, Sentences, References, Business, Career, Continuous Tenses
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Hi,
Could you please check out this sentence of mine?
Your tenses are inconsistent. Depending on your intended meaning, say either
seems / has been affected
or
seemed / had been affected.
It seemed that the work, of the
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Is as well as considered a parenthical phrase? Should it be set off with commas?
Thanks!
My non-linguistic view thinks not. I may be wrong but one of the "as well as" usages has a prepositional property which is typically
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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dimsumexpress
116 days ago
Articles, Prepositions, Clauses, Commas, Punctuation, Relationships, Writing, Business, Usages, Friendships, Careers, Friends
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Good evening, Chris, these are thought-provoking questions you have asked, and here is my opinion backed up by data from authoritative sources. 1. The possibility of tell filling the slot of talk in the example sentence seems questionable at
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1. The question has been answered a few times already , but has not been answered.
Okay to omit the subject in the sentences like the above (omitting the subject in the second clause), right? A comma before but is necessary even when the
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Hi. I could be mistaken but I think I have heard people say that short adverbial phrases when they come in front of a clause or are located somewhere appropriate within a sentence, a comma could, might as well, not be used. I think the example
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