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Hi teachers, here are two questions. 1. I can't believe I made it into San Francisco , at long last! This morning, I went to the airport to catch my 10 a.m. flight. In this sentence, what does this expression mean here and what does
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Hi teachers, here are two questions. 1. I can't believe I made it into San Francisco , at long last! This morning, I went to the airport to catch my 10 a.m. flight. In this sentence, what does this expression mean here and what does
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Hi, I'm writing this essay, but I'm not sure about this paragraph, does the text has grammatical mistakes?: "Among other similarities with the portraits of Buddha are the depictions of children clambering over John Yu's head and
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The Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English explains that "in followed by a time period is more often used to talk about future events • He'll be here in a few minutes." Can't we use "in" to talk about the durations
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Well, I don't know now. From a brief google, the phrase seems to be used to refer to surveillance cameras, which are becoming ubiquitous in American cities. And it turns out that "Eye in the Sky" was a hit for the Allan Parsons
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Hi, Moonyscorp. Welcome to English Forums. Thanks for joining us. Both versions work, although the expression is more common with "with." The only thing that bothers me is the sense of timing. Usually such a comment accompanies a new
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
avangi
35 days ago
Capital Letters, Tenses, Present Continuous, Present Tenses, Writing, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Continuous Tenses, Languages, Expressions
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From a strictly grammatical point of view, only really soon is correct because real is originally an adjective. In informal style and spoken English real is used as an adverb but it's a good idea to avoid expressions like real good in serious
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I appreciate your input but please don't give it unless you know it is grammatically correct. This is excellent advice for banu82in. When a most of expression is the subject, the verb agrees with the word after most of . Most of the butter
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I appreciate your input but please don't give it unless you know it is grammatically correct. This is excellent advice for banu82in. When a most of expression is the subject, the verb agrees with the word after most of . Most of the butter
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A differs from (= has a different quality) B. Mr A differs with (= has a different opinion) Mr B. " with regards to " and with regard to "-- The first is incorrect; these are the only standard expressions: 'as regards', ' in regard to', and
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