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I think the pronoun 'they' is appropriate here because its antecedent is so far removed and separated by phrases separated by commas.
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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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Dear Homwork helper,
I need your help to solve following questions as soon as possible.
Thanks a million
Rahman
1. The phrase in bold face is a phrase fragment. Correct it by attaching it to the nearby independent clause:
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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
47 days ago
Capital Letters, Resume, Pronouns, Commas, Punctuation, Curriculum Vitae, Writing, Sentences, Business, Salutations, Qualifications, Resumes
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Hi. Thank you.
If the phrase "living creatures" were happen to be (for the illustration purpose of asking this question) "a living creature" in the singular, would you say placing a comma before the pronoun
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Hi. Thank you again.
Do you think the placement of commas for these is correct? I think what I am trying to ask is if some words or phrases or clauses (possible?) exist and if those can leave a possibility of readers of the sentence with
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Hi. Thank you. I think comma would be correct (or possibly optional in this case) before the word "which" in the definition I found in the Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner's English Dictionary. I feel/think the part "that is
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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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In sentence The police found the weapon ,which made prosecutor's job easier .
My friend says which is refering to weapon and hence this construcion is wrong .He says it should be
The police found the weapon,making prosecutpr's job
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
grammar geek
75 days ago
Clauses, Nouns, Pronouns, Commas, Relative Pronouns, Punctuation, Relationships, Writing, Sentences, Friendships, Friends
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