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Interesting question.
The basic structure of these sentences is "to have experience doing something". Therefore, in each case I would omit the word "of" after "experience". For example:
- Do you have any
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Hello,
I have a few quick grammar questions. They are as follows:
1. What is the difference between have gone and have been . I often hear people use these two expressions, but I am not sure they are following the rule that states the
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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postmodernbliss
274 days ago
Articles, Difference Between, Clauses, Commas, Punctuation, Definite Articles, Writing, Sentences, Countries, Asia, Korea, Languages, Samples, Expressions
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I recently used the following question on a quiz:
A gentleman ________ I had never seen before smiled at me.
The students were to put the relative pronoun in the first blank and then write whether it was a defining or non-defining relative
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anonymous
357 days ago
Articles, Clauses, Nouns, Pronouns, Commas, Relative Pronouns, Punctuation, Whom, Definite Articles, Questions, Writing, Sentences, Animals, Indefinite, Students
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A. Do not put a comma after the so. You would be breaking up a clause if you did. You put commas after opening "So"s because in that situation it functions as an opening word. A good rule of thumb is if you can remove the word and the
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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yutgoyun
1 yr 13 days ago
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Hi Eff, Some do, some don't.. 1) From time to time, the palace is a venue for performances by costumed actors. (OR: COSTUMED ACTORS PERFORMANCES??) That's fine as it is. If you were to use 'costumed actors performances', you
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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yizhivika
1 yr 78 days ago
Articles, Plurals, Possessives, Nouns, Commas, Punctuation, Definite Articles, Paragraphs, Singular Nouns, Apostrophes, Writing, Sentences, Context, Singular, Apologies
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Robert Bannister wrote on 27 Jun 2004: Adrian Bailey wrote on 27 Jun 2004: Unless Richard Streeter ... simply a man-on-the-street moviegoer and not someone famous aka "Moviegoer". So is "The famous scientist, Albert Einstein, once
alt.usage.english
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cybercypher
5 yr 264 days ago
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Can anyone settle my mind on the following phrase: This is to certify that (*) was enrolled for a full-time ... that looks odd to me. Is this sentence OK? And what job is the comma doing here? Thanks in advance. It has the effect of making
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... 4) .. man is the king of the universe. Man is king of the universe. Or... The man is king of the universe. The two sentences have very different ... of humanity. The second implies that one person, out of all of humanity, holds the title
alt.usage.english
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jerry friedman
6 yr 142 days ago
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