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Memos show Clinton turmoil Question: I would have written ''Clinton's turmoil''. Why didn't the author use apostrophe? BY CRAIG GORDON AND TOM BRUNE | <email addresses removed by mod.> August 13, 2008 Question: Why
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
jackson6612
1 yr 105 days ago
Regards, Articles, Plurals, Dates, Tenses, Clauses, Negatives, Past Perfect, Colons, Expressions, Commas, Paragraphs, Apostrophes, Hyphens, Semicolons
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"Businesses like banks and bakeries are closed." To be absolutely clear, I would say: "Some farmers refuse to evacuate because the harvest season is approaching." "As" can be used to mean "because," and your
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Overall, not bad. But the second paragraph needs tweaking.
I don't think you can improve your English by having someone proof your work. That's why I usually highlight the things you can fix yourself.
Hope this helps.
By the way, are you
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Nona The Brit wrote:
They are quite long with complex structures, so they are only suitable for a formal context.
Thank you, Nona. These are two paragraphs for a PG essay I'm writing, so I think a formal register is appropriate.
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Extreme Makeover: Home Edition is a (truly is a hollow adjective here) superb reality show that
first aired on December 3, 2003. Each 60 minute episode features a team of designers, contractors and several hundred workers who must race against
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Ever since its birth, this dog has been with Larry. Now, the dog was malodorous, old, crippled
and blind, but Larry was always with it. (The adj. stinky is too colloquial to be employed in written English.) Larry's roommate, John, wanted to get
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Forgive me, but what do you mean by a “dash.” All the examples here show two hyphens. These are not dashes.
There are three types of dashes, namely Hyphens, Em Dashes and En Dashes
The hyphen is the shortest of the three and is used most
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Hello, all. What a great forum! I'm not sure if this is the right spot for this question; if not, let me know.
Here's a paragraph I'm working on, in which all numbers are to be written out. I'm confused about the rule on hyphenation when it
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Here's a paragraph I'm working on, in which all numbers are to be written out. I'm confused about the rule on hyphenation when it comes to quantity and as modifiers. Can anyone help?
The troublesome paragraph:
"...the numbers are staggering:
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You might add a couple of hyphens:
20- or 30-minute
rugged-looking
But otherwise, a perfect native paragraph!
MrP
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