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If you are speaking Colloquial, Idiomatic American English you will NEVER say, "Put your money IN where your mouth is." the colloquialism is "Put your money where your mouth is," or "Put up or shut up," "ante up
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
dormouse
252 days ago
American English, Expressions, Colloquialisms, Countries, United States, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Speaking, Chat, American, Friendships, Languages
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Hello,
I am interested in international finance and overall business. I think that you would benefit from conversing with me because I am absolutely frank. I would be able to give you an oppurtunity to get used to American English
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And now, for my last humongous post! The Michigan Examination for the Certificate of Proficiency in English (ECPE) is put out by the University of Michigan English Language Institute (UM-ELI), the oldest and most respectable organization of its
misc.education.language.english
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credoquaabsurdum
4 yr 100 days ago
American English, Expressions, Colloquialisms, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Countries, Animals, Careers, United States, Business, American, Cambridge, CPE, Conversational
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Hello Casi.
> But in my dialect, Canadian English,
> as I am sure American English shares the same colloquialism (?), it's acceptable:
> There are two deers in the park.
So, do you think whether "deers" is used or not depends on areas?
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Yoko:
Some of my dictionaries say that "deer" is both the singular and the plural form.
Additionally, Yoko,
There is one deer in the park.
There are two deer in the park.
"deer" doesn't take -s in the plural. It's a mass noun. But
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alt.usage.english
by
donna richoux
5 yr 271 days ago
Articles, American English, Accents, Spelling, Abbreviations, British English, Countries, Great Britain, United States, American, China, Classes, Acronyms, Colloquialisms, APA Format
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alt.usage.english
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donna richoux
5 yr 286 days ago
Articles, American English, Accents, Spelling, Abbreviations, British English, Countries, Great Britain, United States, American, China, Classes, Acronyms, Colloquialisms, APA Format
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alt.usage.english
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donna richoux
5 yr 300 days ago
Articles, American English, Accents, Spelling, Abbreviations, British English, Countries, Great Britain, United States, American, China, Classes, Acronyms, Colloquialisms, APA Format
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alt.usage.english
by
donna richoux
5 yr 317 days ago
Articles, American English, Accents, Spelling, Abbreviations, British English, Countries, Great Britain, United States, American, China, Classes, Acronyms, Colloquialisms, APA Format
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