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Frankly, I prefer British English rather than American English. In my point of view, the former one is formal and traditional. The latter one contains lots of proverb that has enormous local color. Besides, I don ’ t like the conversation speed
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These are all acceptable ways of phrasing these sentences in colloquial American English. In more formal, careful English the use of "like" and "how" as subordinate conjunctions (Do it how I told you. Do it like I told you. And so forth) would not
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The following remarks are for American English.
may and might are equivalent when they mean that something is possible .
It may rain today. / It might rain today.
Both mean
It is possible that it will rain today.
Susan may
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Hi Anon, what Jim said makes a lot of sense, and we discussed it a little in another thread, I think. The point was that teaching completely descriptively is impossible. The teacher would have to say: Mr X says this, Mr Y says that, and Mr Z says
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I am trying to formulate guidelines for learners of English as a foreign language with regards the use of may/might/could
to express possibility. It seems to me that you can use these three
modals (almost) interchangeably when expressing
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"You knew your brother did a bad thing, did you?"
"You knew your brother did a bad thing, did you ?"
Is the difference between those two an accent matter, or a
pronunciation matter?
Neither. The intonation is the key. You have
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You can talk to your dog, to plants, or to deceased
relatives. The conversation is imaginary, of course, but you're
allowed to have an imagination, even in English!
The distinction between can and may described by your
teacher is really no
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Hi, I'm a newbie, and have found this topic interesting, so I'd like to put in my 2 cents. I know that in American English, especially in California, L.A. I heard people use "That" - for "who" or "which" in daily conversation. As for me, I don't
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Even on the pages of this forum you will find different opinions about the usage of may and might .
The following are my personal feelings on the subject. Note that
these are from the point of view of American English, and you may want
to wait
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From my experience, the form "and" is used most naturally in North American English, however, many people have the form without the "and" in their idiolect, because math books caution against its used. Most math books insist that one should only
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