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These are correct: 1. It is to be used as a replacement for the old equipment currently in use. 2. With your generous support, (the) construction has begun on our long-awaited project. It is expected to be completed soon. 3. Hearing the jingling
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India progress is sluggish and slow
So even you belong to the same league, who truly believes in the above caption. Even you are annoyed at the pace of development in India. Take for an instance, a dam construction deadline was four years, but
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In Bryan A. Garner's "Dictionary of Modern American Usage", the set phrase "suffice it to say" is explained to be the subjunctive form of the indicative "it suffices to say". The article on the subjunctive mood in
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
anonymous
69 days ago
Regards, Articles, Constructions, Subjunctives, References, Business, Career, Countries, United States, United Kingdom, Great Britain, American, Languages
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Hii, I have a question related to this that nagged me for some time in the past and that I forgot ... until I saw this thread. I know that there's a special word order when we have as - how - so - too , the indefinite article, a noun and an
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You may have noticed that the second article I refered you to is regarding Scandanavian Sterilisation from 1930s up to 1970s. Hitler died in 1945, yet the eugenics continued. Finland is not accountable for what happened in other countries, just as
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Hi, I have been reading an article about Alcatraz and I've found the following passage can't be understood by me.: The collaborative effort of attorney general Homer Cummings and Director of the Bureau of Prisons, Sanford Bates, produced
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Hi i have done the following:
Question>>>>>TASK 4: Please look at the student errors below. First identify what is wrong with the sentence. Then write: 1. what caused the error; 2. what type of an error it is; 3. how you would
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
nickydee
174 days ago
Regards, Articles, Grammar, Prepositions, Constructions, Clauses, Nouns, Pronouns, Adverbs, Commas, Present Perfect, Past Tenses, Sentences, Countries, Languages
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I think most nouns are either countable or uncountable nouns with some nouns having both characteristics (if I am not mistaken).
and the words 'hymn" and "lament" seem to be countable nouns.
As I said, it's
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
mr wordy
176 days ago
Articles, Constructions, Nouns, Uncountable Nouns, Countable Nouns, Sentences, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Songs, Structures, Languages, Music
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Hi. Thank you again.
I did a search on the phrases "a read-through" and "a reading-through" on the Google Book Search and have gotten the numbers (I think they represent the number of sources that have such a phrase) 654 and
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GG,
Thanks for such an all-embracing answer.
> Your biggest problem is punctuation.
I began to study English grammar by a thick tome, which has the punctuation section at the end. Probably, I might read that section first.
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ESL Essay, Writing World
by
victor_amelkin
225 days ago
Grammar, Constructions, Punctuation, Plurals, Articles, Writing, Students, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Usages, Languages
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