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In this case, I think which and that are both possible. According to most grammar books, you can use which and that interchangeably in restrictive clauses, although there are several occasions on which that must be used or when 'that' is
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Normal 0 false false false RU X-NONE X-NONE MicrosoftInternetExplorer4 Hello, Raja, It goes without saying that there is no blame in being a non-native speaker and a layperson in linguistic science, so
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
gleb_chebrikoff
7 days ago
Regards, Clauses, Pronouns, Adverbs, Intonations, Pronunciation, Phonetics, Relationships, Writing, Sentences, Friendships, Friends, Semantics, Expressions, Numbers
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CalifJim , Thank you for your very helpful answer! It provides a nice and very useful recipe for forming a question which rests on a gappy statement! And it definitely helped me a lot in further clarifying my question and to reframe it in your
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Hello Gleb, Thank you, again, for your answer! Let me say from the outset, that I am neither a native speaker, nor an expert in linguistics, but nonetheless interested, so please forgive me that I am not as well-versed as far as technical terms
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Hey guys!!
I was wondering if there's a volunteer out there who can help me with my sentence. I have been working my behind off these past couple of days trying to make sense of it all...
I'm working on the phrases and clauses and am
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Hi To emphasize a place, time or reason we can use: the place where ... the day when ... the reason why ... In informal styles, the place/the day/the reason can be dropped. Often times this happens if it's somewhere in the middle of the
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Hi A finite adverbial clause is a clause that functions as an adverb in a sentence and has a finite verb form in it. Let's use an finite adverbial of time as an example: Every time I see him I am really scared. (Every time I see him =
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don't make your sentences too long unnecessarily. always keep in mind what the subject of your sentence is, and see if there's concord. use (sub)ordinating conjunctions the way they ought to be used. don't overstretch yourself in your
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Hello teachers, How are you today? I would like to ask you when do we use 'were to' in conditional clauses and can we use it in general instead of 'if' even when the conditional form is likely. Can you give me example. Can I say:
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Hello,
Please advise on the below email:
Dear All,
I am writing to update you on our progress since last meeting also to see what achivments were completed since then:
1- xx
2-xx
as you notice there was a good
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