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Hidden in this great 19th-Century prose is the subjunctive form, need , the reason for which I cannot identify right now. The subjunctive was used much more commonly at the time this was written. The subjunctive is the bare form of the infinitive,
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The modal verb "should" is followed by a bare infinitive, not by a plural verb. Thanks, Amy, for letting me know that 'spend' is a bare infinitive. I have wrongly called it a plural verb.
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If you whant i can write my answers,but someone must to check it!! Hi, Please do so and post your choices. This way, I am pretty sure you'll receive feedback and help. P.S. " someone must to check it " is grammatically incorrect
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Hi, Here goes the long story... Yesterday, I was talking with a girl from England who's been living here for nearly a year. She told me she was looking for an organization to join here, and on the basis of her background and beliefs I
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When we talk with biblical precision about the resurrection, we discover an excellent foundation for lively and creative Christian work in the present world--not, as some suppose, for an escapist or quietist piety.
Here, the word
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Hi,
I gotthe following sentences from the ChristianToday magazne, a magazine of evangelical conviction, by N.T. Wright on March 25, 2008, and hope you would answer some questions on them.
When we talk with biblical precision about the
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The article you quote is about the relationship between car and its .
Every car must have its brakes tested.
The article is not about subject-verb agreement. But since you ask, there are two grammatical facts to consider:
1. The
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I have to hand in the reports tomorrow. Could you please run a quick check through them? Thanks loads!!!
A:
When asked to make a sentence with When J~ , J will ~, Harry sometimes gets confused with the order of two events happening and
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The pattern 'either of plural noun ' doesn't go well with the present tense unless you have a modal verb.
1. Either of you could be right. Either of you might be right.
2. Either of the two answers will do. Both answers are correct. Each of
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Hello x.m.
That's a very interesting question. The phrase seems to be used mostly as an object, which is reasonable enough, since the context is usually 'advertiser encouraging you to do something for someone', as in these real examples:
1.
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