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Do/does/did is not used in questions 1. with forms of to be : Is he happy? Were they swimming? 2. with perfect and past perfect auxiliaries : Have you seen him? Had it already begun? 3. sometimes with have/has/had when the verb is in the
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
cool breeze
11 days ago
Tenses, Clauses, Pronouns, Auxiliaries, Past Perfect, Whom, Past Tenses, Modal Auxiliaries, Relationships, Writing, Usages, Friendships, Friends
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Dear friend, 'should go' is a single verb phrase containing a modal auxiliary verb should . This operator is more specifically known as a central modal , because it shares all the features pertaining to modal auxiliary verbs. 'need to
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
gleb_chebrikoff
14 days ago
Constructions, Clauses, Negatives, Auxiliaries, Modals, Modal Auxiliaries, Relationships, Writing, Friendships, Friends, Negations
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Hi everybody, I strongly disagree with the views mentioned on behalf of the Callan Method. Just because it promises to get the student where he or she wants to, doesn't mean the Method deserves criticism. I've been teaching English both
Teaching English (TEFL)
by
anonymous
1 yr 3 days ago
Grammar, Learning English, Negatives, Verbs, Teaching English, Vocabulary, Language Schools, Paragraphs, Auxiliaries, Sentence Structures, Clauses, Modals, Modal Auxiliaries
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Hi CB, To my home has nothing to do with verbs. To is a preposition here. Did I say it had anything to do with verbs? Yes, to is a preposition but to my home functions an infinitive object. Am I wrong? The auxiliary forms of need are used
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Do we need to say more? Let me ask you few more questions. In Will you come to my home today : to my home is infinitive object But when Do we need to say more is changed into affirmative statement Do just disappears, We need to say more . What
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Always and other adverbs of indefinite time (ever, never, usually, seldom etc.) are usually placed after a defective/modal auxiliary in affirmative clauses: I shall always regret that. I would never have believed him. CB
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Thank you, Mr. M. Then, what are these ones I wrote? They have if-clauses and what look to be resultant clauses, and also, they seem to be good, sensible sentences.
All first conditional??
If I hear from you before I leave, I would call you
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Hello, Dr. E.T. Babalola!
I'm still uncertain of the third example you've given here. Are you fully convinced that the italicised part of the third example is a non-finite clause?
As I know, clauses can be divided into two kinds, namely
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Cool Breeze wrote: Hi Belly 1) You could use to get as well. Both the full infinitive (to get) and the plain/bare infintive (get) are correct after do in sentences like yours. There is an old song All I Have To Do Is Dream. It could just as well
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Hi Belly 1) You could use to get as well. Both the full infinitive (to get) and the plain/bare infintive (get) are correct after do in sentences like yours. There is an old song All I Have To Do Is Dream. It could just as well be All I Have To Do
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