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today is an adverb or a noun Is today an adverb in any of these sentences.If so, why? What's the date today? He's going to ring you at some point today. Today is even hotter than yesterday! Is that today's paper? He left today,
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I have taught English as a Second language to new learners. The question/answer pair "What is this?" / "This is a ..." is lesson 2 (after introductions "Hello, my name is...", "What's your name?") t
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Dear Marina, I am glad you care a lot for English plural forms of nouns. You are probably learning English as a Second Language. The noun police is followed by a plural verb because it is a very big group of people. For one Individual, we talk of
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Thank you very much CJ, Zerox, and Carson. You all have given me very valuable advices. After reading through all you said carefully, and then watching a couple of English TV programmes, I believe I can now tell the difference! The ending /z/ in
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I don't know what you guys are all on about with devoiced /z/. It's not a devoiced /z/, it's just /s/. In the example that someone above used, "vases"... I don't know about up North or across the pond (either one), but American Standard has that
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Speaking as a teacher, I get irritated when I see questions like this
in an examination. I feel that it is a trick question. I hope it was
not in an exam for those learning English as a Second language.
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Hi Believer,
It's my setence, I know, and it sure looks silly without the entire conversation, doesn't it? I have been thinking about this. Another example of how a native speaker just "knows" it - and I'm sure one of the teachers of English as
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Hi guys I have no intention to offend anyone, but the article below is the one I found online. Do you believe this is a true story? The use of "the" in terms like "going to hospital/the hospital" is usually ascribed to the influence of Irish
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I am one of those people who learned American English as a second language.
American English dictionaries never mention anything about a particular noun
being countable and uncountable. I learned mass nouns and abstract nouns, both
of
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Many English nouns and noun phrases can be used as adverbs. They are called "adverbial objectives". From the standpoint of word order, an adverbial objective is put as if it were an objective of a verb, but actually it works as an adverbial
ESL Linguistics Discussion Forum
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paco2004
4 yr 175 days ago
Nouns, Verbs, Noun Phrases, Grammar, Adverbs, Word Order, English as a Second Language, Expressions, Accusative, English Grammar, Teaching English
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