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Personally I just use what feels correct (for me) in each individual case. Same here. And nine times out of ten I make the agreement with the noun phrase immediately after "none of". I haven't introspected enough to be sure whether
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My brother lives in India . The verb "to live" is intransitive and does not take an object. "I sleep in my bed ." These are prepositional phrases acting adverbially, modifying the verb and telling where. The verb "to
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
avangi
310 days ago
Difference Between, Prepositions, Nouns, Adverbs, Gerunds, Predicates, Nominative, Direct Objects, Adjectives, Sentences, Animals, Countries, Indirect, Objects
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I am a 11 year old that might flunk english because of nominative and objective case what is the difference between the two.
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Edit. Ah, I see you're referring only to the third person. Sorry. To my ear, there's no difference between first and third. I'm one of those relics who is still more comfortable using the nominative case in nominative situations. Hey,
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Hi Tanit, Huevos recently made an impassioned plea for the accusative on a thread, "Nominative and Objective Pronouns - - - - - - Confusing!" Did you miss it? - A. Edit. Ah, I see you're referring only to the third person. Sorry. To
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"Who threw the stone?" (reply) "It is one of those who are angry." I don't think "one" is the subject of anything here. It's a predicate nominative, or "complement" of the verb "is."
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Maria is my friend.
Maria is the subject.
my friend is the predicate nominative.
My faith and my morning coffee are my salvation.
My faith and my morning coffee is the subject.
my salvation is the predicate nominative.
The verb
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If it is commonly used by native writers and speakers, that seems a good enough reason for calling it standard. Meaning is derived from consensus, after all.
However there is a difference between how native speakers use their language, and how
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Imagine a language in which:
“The man hit the table with a stick” is
“Copoloteko tipadela tisadure asutariki bu.”
In this sentence
co = a classifier indicating that we are talking about something animate
polo = man
te = a
ESL Linguistics Discussion Forum
by
forbes
3 yr 194 days ago
Nouns, Intonations, Vowels, Difference Between, Articles, Numbers, Nominative, Accusative, Morphology, Consonants, Curriculum Vitae
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Anonymous wrote: dose anyone no what the difference between a nominative and an objective???? -natty-
Yes, natty, we do. But you'll have a better chance of getting a response if you start a new thread with your question. And more
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