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I think you mean the sentence Never listen to fear, right? Listen is an imperative and no inflection is ever used in English imperatives. Imperatives like this look like infinitives, which should make it easy for you to learn English. Except for
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We are feel so sorry for this short notice. Because we are keep to checking with the factory are to watch over implementation of agreement and to make sure that 800pcs ABC *** have had been received it according subcontract until to 18:00
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Method OF Learning is totally right, because here it's a noun. You could also use FOR , but I don't see any reasons to change that. But if your intention is using "learning" as a verb , like "I use this method to learn
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Hello, another English teacher here. I have been teaching English in China for about 2 and a half years now and also speak fluent French, decent Spanish and am learning Chinese (not as hard as you may think once you get the hang of those tones,
English Audio: Speech and Pronunciation
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anonymous
1 yr 286 days ago
American English, Pronunciation, Numbers, Grammar, British English, Nouns, Learn English, Spelling, Vocabulary, Whom, Genders, Teaching English
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Thank you very much CJ, Zerox, and Carson. You all have given me very valuable advices. After reading through all you said carefully, and then watching a couple of English TV programmes, I believe I can now tell the difference! The ending /z/ in
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Thank you, Avangi.
So I think what you seem to alluding to me is that native speakers like you (I am sure you are one of them) seem to divide a noun into categories based on practical usage -- the usage that serves a practical purpose in an
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Hi Hoa,
You are pretty brave to dare this thread!
The discussion about the “as such” usage, to me, was actually more of a reflection of how we interpret what a noun or noun phrase is, rather than grammatical correctness. As I found on one of
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Hi Yoong, I know what you are trying to do: you want to find a case where you can say "Who are...?", in a question where "who" is the subject. I learned that such a case doesn't exist. When "who" is the subject, the verb is always singular. Like
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Hi Forevershi,
Thank you for your comment.
Forevershi wrote: hi,thanks very much.i have payed a visit this site at once after your message.it's a good site to learn english.
I would have written:
H i, thanks very much. I paid a
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hi
shmsabahí After a quick look ,the way my teacher and essay books say that an essay has a structure . And topic sentences. The structures generally of an essay are: Introduction Body Conclusion You can look in google for "five paragraph
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