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Hi, vineeta. Welcome to English forums. Thanks for joining us. Actually, "What" is the subject of these sentences. In this case it's a pronoun, third person singular. "You" is the direct object of the verb. It's like,
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I don't think this is intended as a declarative sentence, but rather as a caption, or heading. It could also be an announcement of a planned future meeting, in which case it could be considered a correct declarative sentence. If this is
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the first 2 can\t be passivised 'cause they have no direct object the 3rd can be passivised but be aware!...you should keep the TENSE when you passivise...so the correct would be " all the film versions of this books ARE not found
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The causative make is a little different. You have to say the following: Subject + make + object + verb He made his employee repair his shoes. have/get doesn't take a direct object. It is intransitive. He had his shoes repaired (by a
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Well, ya got me there, pal. On this site we usually advise against using the pronoun "about."
"XXX" is the direct object of "discussed." "Discussed about" is considered redundant.
All three
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Welcome to the forums! Maybe you need a recipe to convert sentences from active to passive. First you need to find the subject, verb and direct object in the sentence: The teacher himself couldn't explain it. Subject: teacher Verb: could
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I love this! The second sentence is in passive voice, which is only possible with a transitive verb. The direct object of the verb in the passive voice is actually the subject, "our understanding." The actor is often not mentioned.
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Theresia: You did not accept my earlier corrections to this essay in this posting: http://www.englishforums.com/English/ReviewWritingIeltsPreparation/2/wzbjh/Post.htm Now I have to take time to repeat these corrections with an explanation. I will
ESL Essay, Writing World
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alpheccastars
222 days ago
Essays, Tenses, Clauses, Nouns, Present Tenses, Present Perfect, Modals, Direct Objects, Writing, Countries, Mistakes, United Kingdom, Sentences, Languages, Adjectives
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The adverbs modify the verb. I'm not sure about exceptions. The adverb modifies the verb. "Am going" may be present tense, but it refers to a future action. It's contextual. However, "I am going through menopause"
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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avangi
222 days ago
Prepositions, Tenses, Adverbs, Present Tenses, Direct Objects, Context, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Indirect, Objects
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In "I saw her runing / run toward the gate," "running" and "run" are not verbs, but verbals. They don't have tenses. "Running toward the gate" is a participial phrase. "Run toward the gate" is
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