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They had to have that specially made? The sentence is in the past tense. Since English lacks verbs for situations in which person A does something for person B on person B's request, a rather long and awkward structure is used instead: to have
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
cool breeze
41 days ago
Tenses, Auxiliaries, Present Continuous, Present Tenses, Past Perfect, Present Perfect, Past Tenses, Conditionals, Modal Auxiliaries, Morphology, Future Tenses, Sentences, United Kingdom, Continuous Tenses, Languages
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Hello. I'm a student of English Department at the University of Education Vietnam, HCMC I join englishforum.com to make friends and share English learning experience with all of you. Firstly, please visit my faculty's website : I think it's a
Chat, Make Friends, Meet Friendly People
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nhocxinh2501_d2
47 days ago
IELTS, Languages, Friends, Morphology, Relationships, Friendships, Qualifications, Certificates, Testing, Accreditation, Cambridge, CEA, CPE, Proficiency, Semantics
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The most comprehensive dictionary for English is the Oxford English Dictionary. It is the oldest continuously published dictionary of the language. The printed unabridged edition is about 20 large volumes, covering more than 500,000 words. It is
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Thank you Cool Breeze, now I am more certain that inflecitional verb is just a grammatical purpose.
You're welcome. I think you're right. There are cases in which having lots of verb forms may help make the meaning clearer. Oddly
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"Standard" and "non-standard" dialects/languages are each complete systems and equally complex with their own rules of syntax, morphology etc. There is no correlation between intelligence and the language faculty. Whilst
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I think everybody code-switches to some degree, as long as there is some sort of reason to do so in their society. It doesn't mean they use two dialects just as a bilingual uses two languages, because people often respond to dialect as if it
ESL Linguistics Discussion Forum
by
forbes
293 days ago
Essays, Dialects, Numbers, Morphology, Writing, Relationships, Friendships, Speaking, Animals, Chat, Conversational, Languages, Context, Colours, Sentences
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Although its content is in dispute, the (click here -->) Wiki article on BrE and AmE differences is a good place to start. It describes major categories of differences in spelling, verb morphology, vocabulary, etc. Some vulgarisms in one
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OK, this looks as if my supposition was correct. What you want is English grammatical morphology in simple lists. There ... English (of course they are not as long since the whole business is simpler in English than in Spanish), e.g. Here's a
misc.education.language.english
by
peter t. daniels
3 yr 82 days ago
Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Careers, Business, Songs, Arts, Music, Languages, Morphology, Morphemes
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So you know where to find such information in Spanish? ... be quite easy to find such a list. Ross Clark . probably. . googling pages in Spanish for "accidentes gramaticales" will give you quite a bit of informative pages. . ... there
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otf: How would you call in ENglish all types of ... translates as "what happens as a result of grammar rules" So you know where to find such information in Spanish? Perhaps you could quote us a very small portion of ...
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