We have partnered with TradePub to bring you free industry magazines and resources - no coupons or credit cards required!
Visit: englishforums.tradepub.com
-
Grammarian-bot wrote: A website says that "by" in the following sentence is an adverb. 1. The farmer laid by his crops. But if we analyze, we can see that the word "by" answers the question "what" which makes it a preposition. Also the website
-
She glorified God by giving back to Him the very thing He desired. She : subject glorified : verb God : direct object by giving back to Him the very thing He desired : prepositional phrase, which modifies glorified giving back : gerund (noun)
-
No preview available.
-
Hello Ruslana, To me, the only possible one is B. I think that we are evolving away from indirect objects; the existence of so many phrasal verbs and the more efficient communication using the prepositional object favour the use of the latter.
-
Welcome to English Forums!
It would be better if someone familiar with the Longman book responded
to your question. I am not familiar with that book.
Nevertheless, I will try to answer your questions.
1. An object of a preposition
-
Hi, I'm a new member on the forum. My name's Michal and I'm from Poland.
I've been learning descriptive grammar of Enlgish lately. Reading
LONGMAN Grammar of Spoken and Written English , I've come across a
couple of problems which are hard
-
"We'll send you them back" is not a particularly felicitous construction!
For the most idiomatic patterns, you'll need one of these:
We send the letter to John.
We send John the letter.
We send it to John.
(Not: We send John it.)
We
- English Test
How to Write a Letter Idioms Formal Letter Graduation Songs
Who sings a certain song
|
Ask a question right now..
|