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Dear friend, an interesting question you've asked, and may I present my view on the subject. You accurately define the term idiom, and it logically stems from the definition that all phrasal verbs are idioms, since their meaning, as a rule,
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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
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nhocxinh2501_d2
45 days ago
IELTS, Languages, Friends, Morphology, Relationships, Friendships, Qualifications, Certificates, Testing, Accreditation, Cambridge, CEA, CPE, Proficiency, Semantics
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Dylan Nicholson wrote on 03 Jun 2004: Why do we say that "I will leave tomorrow" is in the future tense but "I leave tomorrow" or "I am leaving tomorrow" are not? Because it's a special case that doesn't
alt.usage.english
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cybercypher
5 yr 172 days ago
Tenses, Context, Countries, Asia, Writing, Languages, China, Auxiliaries, Semantics, Present Tenses, Modals, Future Tenses, Morphology, Numbers, Expressions
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If you're not sure, you shouldn't make such sweeping statements. It doesn't matter whether the words are bisyllabic or not ... your point here. Plus, there are many dialects of BrE: are you sure you can speak for all of them? No. Huh?
alt.usage.english
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stewart gordon
5 yr 182 days ago
Dialects, Prepositions, Nouns, Clauses, Sentences, Relationships, Writing, Determiners, Girlfriends, Semantics, Morphology, Adjuncts
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