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I read that in order to find the subject of a sentence, search for a verb and then decide "who" performed that action. So, in "According to scientists, a cat lives long.", the subject is "cat" and hence we use a
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if there are any. I believe there are, and saw them mentioned in different posts on the forum although didn't pay attention to them. The grammar book I'm studying all lump them up into one catagory: helping verbs. But I'd like to know
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Q Once I saw a person who typed the sentence "I will meet you very the soon". Is the usage of definite article correct in the above mentioned sentence in quotation?
No. It should be 'very soon' Q What is the difference between 'especially'
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Q Once I saw a person who typed the sentence "I will meet you very the soon".
Is the usage of definite article correct in the above mentioned sentence in quotation?
Q What is the difference between 'especially' and 'specially'?
Q What are
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Thanks Doll for interrupting lol.
I would like review item number 3:
3. Which one is correct:
a. How many people do usually live in a Japanese house ?--ok.
b. How many people usually live in a Japanese house?
You said it was okay to
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See p. 2 here:
HUNTER COLLEGE READING/WRITING CENTER GRAMMAR AND MECHANICS The Verb System
Also:
The following verbs are often called "semi-modals" because they are
partly like modal helping verbs and partly like main verbs:
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Hi,
I need to write a sentence in the following pattern, and I don't see how it's possible.
The pattern is: adjective + direct object + helping verb + subject + verb
No articles allowed?
So, something like 'Great strength did he use' .
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The construction of an interogative sentence according to a grammar book is likeQuetion word + helping verb (auxi. verb) +main verb +subject and the rest of the line
This is incorrect, Hanuman, in cases where the interrogative is not the
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Hello,
The construction of an interogative sentence according to a grammar book is like
Quetion word + helping verb (auxi. verb) +main verb +subject and the rest of the line+?
But sometimes I have seen a few interogative sentences without
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Hello Xavier,
you're right of course: Communication is one of the tasks of language.
The Grammar is "late": Language follows special patterns (word order, inflection, cases, conjugation, etc) - language has to follow those patterns as without
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pemmican
4 yr 254 days ago
Grammar, Subjunctives, Tenses, Conditionals, Verbs, Word Order, Helping Verbs, Inflections, Simple Past, Simple Present, Present Tenses
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