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For my brother to feel, that he does not know the right term, must seem a real impediment. Hi frankie, thanks for joining us. Welcome to English Forums. Nix the comma after "feel." The feeling is bad. If this were your sentence, the
ESL Basic English Grammar Questions and Help
by
avangi
1 yr 74 days ago
Commas, Nouns, Articles, Prepositions, Punctuation, Pronouns, Predicates, Clauses, Direct Objects, Relative Pronouns, Nominative, Animals, Writing, Adjectives, Languages
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I'm so cross with myself. I can't even cite material correctly. Join the club! Have you finally got it right? Here is the sentence! It was on his way back past them, carrying a large burger, that he heard what they were saying. He =
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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califjim
1 yr 107 days ago
Articles, Prepositions, Clauses, Nouns, Pronouns, Noun Phrases, Relative Pronouns, Nominative, Indefinite Articles, Direct Objects, Determiners
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Secondly, does a noun phrase always have a complementizer at the start of it (head)? No. According to the description in Wiki, complementizers are the syntactic head of a full clause. A noun phrase is not a full clause. Example: "the grand
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Anaylsis of the large structure: Independent clause #1 : I can not tell you that, mate, Conjunction joining two independent clauses: but Independent clause #2: what I can tell you is that it was one day before my birthday ____________________
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
califjim
1 yr 115 days ago
Possessives, Prepositions, Clauses, Nouns, Pronouns, Noun Phrases, Predicates, Relative Pronouns, Nominative, Direct Objects, Indirect Objects, Determiners
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whoever - pronoun, object of preposition "to" Hi, Shouldn't it be "whomever"? - A. Don't think so, because the case of relative pronoun is governed by the dependent clause (nominative, in this instance). So why
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whoever - pronoun, object of preposition "to" Hi, Shouldn't it be "whomever"? - A. Don't think so, because the case of relative pronoun is governed by the dependent clause (nominative, in this instance).
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There is also an excellent discussion on the usage of Who and Whom provided by American Heritage Dictionary:
Usage Note: The traditional rules that determine the use of who and whom are relatively simple: who is used for a grammatical subject,
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Who as an interrogative pronoun has three cases: who, whom and whose. They exclusively refer to people:
Hey, who ate my poptart?
I know not for whom this letter was sent.
Whose hundred-dollar-bill is this?
If the interrogative pronoun
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Who, whom and whose are relative pronouns. Who and whom are used for persons. They introduce relative clauses postmodifying the head of a noun phrase, and they are identical in form with interrogative pronouns but function differently.
Who:
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