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Thank you. If I take out the possessive part of the name "***'s" and have the generic word/noun "restaurant" in small letter intact, then should I put the definite article "the" or indefinite article "a"
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"why was late reply" is not a sentence. It has no meaning. In English a sentence begins with a capital letter and ends with a punctuation mark (. ; : ? !) In addition, you seem to have omitted a definite or indefinite article or a
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Only a couple: 1. On yesterday 's morning - 'Yesterday' doesn't take the possessive form when used with 'morning'; you can say 'yesterday's news' or 'yesterday's newspapers' for example, but here
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LOL, GG, and that seems simple to you? Grammar Geek wrote: Anyway, you need to let logic (is there logic in English?) , the requirement to avoid ambiguity (is English not ambiguous?) , the desire to avoid sounding silly (how do I know what
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I agree with pieanne on the hyphen.
The possessive in the second one is awfully strange to me. Where did you come across (not 'come over') that?
As for omitting the indefinite article: offer an example where you think it might be
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I presume you mean no indefinite article 'a' either, Elviajero? That leaves us with:
(1) unspecified plurals: 'I love cats';
(2) nouns modified by a possessive, demonstrative, quantifier, etc: 'some/my/this/those cat/cats.
They are likely
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Hello everyone,
I like to do sentence analyses, so if you could sometimes send us some exercises on the matter they will be very welcome.
A/ Here is MY analysis:
1) She is so pretty a girl.
a) parts of speech:
she = nominative
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
hela
4 yr 301 days ago
Articles, Verbs, Possessives, Prepositions, Nouns, Pronouns, Numbers, Adverbs, Nominative, Indefinite Articles, Definite Articles, Direct Objects, Indirect Objects, Accusative
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These are my thoughts on the structure...Please feel free to comment adversely.
The underlying structure of the 'normal' form is:
too to
e.g.
1. 'The question is too difficult to answer.'
2. 'The goalkeeper is too easy to beat.'
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