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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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First off, I'm sorry for that mess. It ignored the format I put it into... I'd like to thank You for such a quick response and correction. I'm not sure about "capturing" either^^... I try to "catch" all
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Hi Forbes Thank you for your long reply. I do appreciate it. I would just like to say that I my opinion is based on the knowledge I have of the Germanic and Romance languages and it is of course very subjective. I fully understand that not
ESL Linguistics Discussion Forum
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cool breeze
2 yr 243 days ago
Verbs, Tenses, Prepositions, Grammar, Idioms, Numbers, Plurals, Spelling, Inflections, Vocabulary, Word Order, Expressions, Morphology, English Grammar, Inflectional Morphology
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Hi Sherry-Norman,
Welcome to the forums.
You asked: "... neither morphology of the chromosomes nor their number determined at this stage." That would make it plural? "... of chromosomes" being implied? or no
You should use 'was'. See
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"... neither morphology of the chromosomes nor their number determined at this stage." That would make it plural? "... of chromosomes" being implied? or no?
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"... neither morphology of the chromosomes nor their number determined at this stage." That would make it plural? "... of chromosomes" being implied? or no?
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Soulwhisper wrote:
first of all....hi am a new member here
from saudi arabia...and am taking morphology...and i have few
questions need answers . first what can we consider the
word..writings..in the sentence HIS WRITINGS WAS PUBLISHED IN
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On 13 Dec 2004, Larry G wrote There's the problem "previously" to what date? As Donna has gone to great lengths to show, the word was ... is in common use in the late 20th century. To what period are you applying
alt.usage.english
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larry g
5 yr 99 days ago
Regards, Articles, Universities, American English, Dialects, Plurals, Constructions, Literature, United States, American, Students, Schools, Refinancing, ESL, Morphology
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This inspires a more general question (and thus a change ... dictionaries claim that they are variants of the same word. "Thy" and "thigh". "Either" and "ether". Those are the canonical two pairs that you
alt.usage.english
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john lawler
5 yr 201 days ago
Vowels, Dialects, Prepositions, Nouns, Plurals, Consonants, Pronouns, Fricatives, Speaking, Speeches, Adjectives, Determiners, Morphemes, Allophones, Morphology
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