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what kinds of countries whose names contain the definite article? Please help me ..
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Difficult question, and it probably depends on the place itself.
The Mormon Tabernacle in Salt Lake City....
Castle Blarney is quite interesting....
Buckingham Palace is at the center....
Windsor Castle is the winter.....
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Hi,
Thanks!! But I am still confused... Please let me organize all the things.
In my understanding so far,
(A) whether or not " -ese" words (Japanese, Chinese, Tiwanese, Vietnamese, etc.) accompany definite articles depends
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
anonymous
141 days ago
Articles, Definite Articles, Countries, United States, Great Britain, Context, Asia, China, American, Ireland, Languages, Nationalities
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Hi.
1. I think I have asked a similar question as part of a thread but since I could not find it, I have decided to start a new thread. Let us try to adjectives like "vibrant" in front of the names of countries, cities and streets.
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
anonymous
180 days ago
Articles, Clauses, Gerunds, Definite Articles, Football, Adjectives, Writing, Countries, United States, Indefinite, Sports
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Hi,
Could we have a situation where we could put the indefinite article "a" or the definite article "the" in front of the names of stadiums like "Los Angeles Stadium"
(Is there one?)? (Anyway, Is there a
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Hi. Could we have a situation where we could put the indefinite article "a" or the definite article "the" in front of the names of stadiums like "Los Angeles Stadium"(Is there one?)? (Anyway, Is there a stadium named
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. This rule is not universal, but it is referring to the definite article that we must usually include when speaking of the Mississippi River, the Rocky Mountains, the Sierre Madre range, the Pacific Ocean, etc. .
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I agree with Delmobile that this is in a telegraphic style common in informal business writing, which explains the missing definite articles. To agree a delivery date sounds OK to my (native British) ears, though. Agree can be transitive or
ESL Vocabulary and Idioms
by
anonymous
210 days ago
American English, Articles, British English, Dates, Definite Articles, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Careers, Business, United States, American, Languages, Styles
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. Hi. Do we always place definite articles for historical events?-- I don't know; there is no such rule, though. If you care to list them all, I'll pass judgment. Do historical events have to be great events?-- No. Are there degrees of
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Hi. Do we always place definite articles for historical events? Do historical events have to be great events? Are there degrees of importance for historical events to use the definite article? Would you say here the existence of the word
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