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Hi Avangi Also depending/ dependent upon the weather would be the farmers and the construction workers. I think it's worth mentioning that in your sentence, I don't see a phrase that means "contingent on". In addition, that
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The for-to-Infinitive Construction "is a construction in which the
infinitive is in predicate relation to a noun or a pronoun preceded by
the preposition for," L. A. Kaushanskaya (1970:200) In the sentence the for-to-Infinitive Construction can
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
anonymous
37 days ago
Prepositions, Constructions, Clauses, Nouns, Pronouns, Predicates, Writing, Sentences, Countries, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Styles, Apologies
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Dear friend, Basically, any sentence consists of two parts. They are complete subject and complete predicate. Complete subject is the part of the sentence which names what is talked about, in your case, it is trains. The part which tells what is
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"She is a beautiful girl." "Beautiful" is called an attributive adjective because it is IN FRONT OF the noun. If you say, "She is beautiful," then it is called a predicate adjective because it's part of the
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1. Look the word up in the dictionary to find its meaning. 2. Check its part of speech. It it is a noun, you can use it as a subject or object; if it is a verb, you can use it as a simple predicate. If it is an adjective or adverb, you can use it
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1. Look the word up in the dictionary to find its meaning. 2. Check its part of speech. It it is a noun , you can use it as a subject or object; if it is a verb , you can use it as a simple predicate. If it is an adjective or adverb , you can use
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Just the base noun of the subject and the verb phrase . I have underlined them in these sentences: The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dogs. The mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation. The unhappy fellow had never met the girl of his
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i have to label the simple subjects, verb or verb phrases, direct objects, indirect objects, and predicate nouns. Then I have to bracket any prepositional phrases and label the objects of the prepositions. Here is the sentence: Susie and I
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I know that linking verbs must be followed by a predicate noun, predicate pronoun, or predicate adjective; these are linked back to the subject to rename or describe.
How does one explain commonly spoken and written sentences, like the
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No one / said (that it would be easy); subject = No one; said that it would be easy = predicate; said = verb; that = conjunction; that it would be easy = noun clause as object of "said"; it = subject of noun clause; would be easy =
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