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You do not need to double the last consonant of such verbs before adding -ed or -ing.
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What do you know about words that ends with doulble consonant l ?
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I think I hear 'Sunday' there.You must ...on Sunday.(maybe) Hmm, it might be "Sunday", yes. Here comes a BIG problem that I've been wondering about for ages... And I'd like to find out more on this phenomenon soon.The
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- the "l" in "lee" is a clear L : we find it before vowels and /j/. - the "l" in "bell" is a dark one : we find it in all other cases (end of word, before a consonant). However, it is said that in American
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I don't fully understand what a contraction is. So if I put an 's, 'll, 'd, 've, etc after any word does it make it a contraction? Only in spoken English. But in written English, some contractions are not usually written that
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
kooyeen
47 days ago
Dialects, Spelling, Contractions, Consonants, Accents, American Accents, Countries, United States, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Speaking, American, Speeches, Training, Languages
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True, Anonymous! Pluralized acronyms should not use apostrophes. As an experienced English Tutor/Mentor, apostrophes are used in possession of & in contractions (i.e., Jane's cat won't eat fish.) To place an apostrophe after an acronym or
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
anonymous
52 days ago
Plurals, Colons, Punctuation, Spelling, Contractions, Consonants, Apostrophes, Relationships, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Friendships, Friends, Acronyms, Languages
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short 'the' (before a consonant sound)
French le
Oddly e nough, a large p e r centage of unstressed English vow e ls "reduce to schwa" in rap i d speech, including those underlined here. It varies, depending on the
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AJ Hoge's "effortless english" is a waste of money. I made the mistake of buying it for a friend who doesn't speak much English and she doesn't even use it. I don't blame her because it takes a lot of effort to learn with
English Audio: Speech & Pronunciation
by
elena_osullivan
60 days ago
Vowels, Accents, American Accents, Consonants, American English, Dialects, Pronunciation, Grammar, Speak English, Relationships, Speaking, United States, American, Languages, Friends
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If vowels in a language are few,then it is hard to understand that language. and as I said "Because the consonants are mostly pronounced loose that makes it hard to recognise the words." No, because "few vowels" means there
Topic of the Moment!
by
kooyeen
62 days ago
Vowels, Difference Between, Tenses, Consonants, Past Tenses, Countries, Asia, China, Languages, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Mistakes
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Oh,I was almost sleeping when I wrote this last night and the diversion happened.I meant to say: If vowels in a language are few,then it is hard to understand that language. and as I said "Because the consonants are mostly pronounced loose
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