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Hello, 1. You cannot find a single leaf on the tree. I have to rewrite the sentence using "as much as " or "as many as". a) You cannot find as much as a single leaf on the tree. b) You cannot find as many as a single leaf on
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My tips: Look at the photoalbum: http://picasaweb.google.com/Sean.Pigg/MimsAndSeanSHouse With an elementary/pre-intermediate student these pictures could be used to teach: 1. The vocabulary of house and living. 2. Present simple by asking: What do
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Thank you for your answer.
So, If I want to say that are chairs in here, What must I use?
There are chairs in here. (I think this is wrong)
There are some chairs in here. (I think this is the great sentence)
With gold:
There's
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I don´t understand the use and the meaning of these casses, i´ll put the explanation of my english book The use of Some/Any (Yes, very difficult) Some is used in positive sentences with plurals and uncountable nouns
Examples:
I have some
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CalifJim wrote: difference is a countable noun. Countable nouns in the singular require a determiner. no is a determiner. not is not a determiner. not negates the verb. So you can have the positive statement There is with the determiner no and
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difference is a countable noun. Countable nouns in the singular require a determiner. no is a determiner. not is not a determiner. not negates the verb.
So you can have the positive statement There is with the determiner no and noun the
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Hi,
Please look the sentence "This is NO easy task". What part of speech is "NO" in the sentence? My English-Japanese dictionaries say this NO is an Adjective because it modifies and negates the phrase "easy task". But I understand that "task"
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Hello I'm an English learner from Japan and I have a question. Please look the sentence "This is NO easy task". What part of speech is "NO" in the sentence? My English-Japanese dictionaries say this NO is an Adjective because it modifies and
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I have gone through a lot of the old posts on the topic any . This is my understanding of any usage.
Any can be followed by a plural/uncountable/singular noun.
1. When any is used in interogative or negative form, it is usually followed by a
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Hi,
Please check if my reasoning is correct.
a little and little are ususally used in front of uncountable nouns to signal the amount in possession and they respectively are coming from the positive polarity and negative polarity view
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