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As in... the last one?
As in... the latest one?
The last one could mean there are no more.
The latest one could mean there are multiple occurrences, this
being the latest.
In conversation though, depending upon context, they
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Again in a conversational context, for me the questions posed,
without further context would seem to elicit this kind of
conversation...
A) What club are you in? (Tennis? soccer? crib? or? and so forth)
After the type of club is
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Hard to answer anything since I'm not even sure what 'normal' is in this context. 'Bring forth' is a phrasal verb, meaning 'produce' among other meanings. I merely meant that religion shouldn't be forced to nearly
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Could you tell me if the following sentence sounds idiomatic from a native speaker's viewpoint? "I need to slam-dunk her a quick one" It may well get a laugh from Al Bundy in the context of a TV sitcom, but I think it would be
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Hi, Both 'thought' and 'fixed' are past tense. The fact that the car is, in the present, fixed or not doesn't change your word choice for this sentence. You are correct when you say the past tense ' thought ' is to
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
bradnugent
13 days ago
Grammar, Tenses, Present Tenses, Punctuation, Past Tenses, Writing, Sentences, Context, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Conversational
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Hi,
If ABC Graduate Recruitment is the name of a graduate scheme, then
which of the following sentences are correct?
note: there are more than 1 vacancy
I am interested in the ABC Graduate Recruitment Vacancies I am interested
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when they were discribing cars, they said:
Cornering : does it hug the road or does it wallow about ?
1. Is wallow about an idiom? I can only find some reference in british style.
2. In this context, when discribing cars, what does
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If you want to know which one is used the most... I don't know, lol. Probably "was" in informal registers, and "were" in formal ones. I have always used "were" regardless of register. In other words, I have always
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I’d like to make a liberal comment with this observation. Having read most of the threads lately and this one is among them, there is a prevailing trend in which learners are posting long lists of questions and dialogs asking for correction help.
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Hi Tom Can I use it in everyday conversation? I'd say it's sometimes used in everyday conversation. Is the use of come natural in the given sentence?... I will invite you to dinner come December. I'd say that would be possible, but
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