We have partnered with TradePub to bring you free industry magazines and resources - no coupons or credit cards required!
Visit: englishforums.tradepub.com
-
When it comes to above and below used as adjectives, I
prefer them after the noun. Some people insist that they can be
used in front of the nouns, but that grates on my ear as much as the asleep man or saying We did that the before time instead
-
Miles -- I don't mean to be too discouraging, but "performaly" is not a word. I'm not even sure what an adjective form of a verb would be, unless you mean somehing like "a performing bear," in which case you would use the gerund. Not all parts of
-
Hi! I'd like to ask anybody. How can I easely learn prefixes an suffixes. Is there a dictionary what can easely help me? For instance, I can have the verb perform. Noun is performance, person is performer, adjective is performaly, and negative
-
I don't think I understand the question. Nouns, adjectives, and
adverbs are called parts of speech. Is that the terminology
you're looking for? The study of how words are put together using
meaningful prefixes and suffixes like -ness, -able,
-
How To Learn English ?
PART 2
Learning a language is mainly based upon self-struggle. Maybe the only thing to be done by the teachers on this subject is to advise a method. Because, in a sense, language cannot be taught but learned. So,
English Audio: Speech and Pronunciation
by
exclusive
3 yr 269 days ago
Difference Between, Pronunciation, Numbers, Grammar, Nouns, Learn English, Interviews, Jokes, Expressions, Prefixes, Pronouns, Antonyms, Suffixes, Adverbs
-
1. "Worse" is the comparative of "bad" while "worst" is the superlative.
bad-worse-the worst
His new movie is worse than his last.
Your cooking is getting worse! (compared to before)
Among his movies, the newest one is the worst.
This is
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
teacher eric
4 yr 346 days ago
Articles, Grammar, Verbs, Dates, Constructions, Nouns, Numbers, Adverbs, British English, Universities, Quotation Marks, Prepositional Verbs, Prefixes, Hyphens
-
There is no rule. Words with these prefixes have come about through accidents of history. The most usual is "un-", but always consult a dictionary. The following does not really answer your question, but you may find it somewhat useful anyway,
-
There have been a number of recent questions concerning when to use hypens. The following is an excerpt from The Economist magazine's style guide.
© The Economist Newspaper Limited 2004
Use hyphens for:
1. FRACTIONS (whether nouns or
ESL Common English Questions and Answers - Archived Posts
by
taiwandave
5 yr 157 days ago
Nouns, Adverbs, Verbs, Numbers, Universities, Prepositional Verbs, Prefixes, Dates, Hyphens, Quotation Marks, Grammar, Constructions
-
"to run" and "to run on" are two different things. Rex> They are indeed different verbs and as far as I know, they're Rex> considered as such by all linguists. But not lexicographers. Most dictionaries would put
alt.usage.english
by
lee sau dan
5 yr 159 days ago
Prepositions, Nouns, Phrasal Verbs, Adverbs, Prefixes, Sentences, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Languages, Phrases, Noun Phrases, Verbs
-
CyberCypher> I don't think anyone would use it in that context, CyberCypher> except to make a linguistic joke. "to run" ... simpler to verbs with separable prefixes in German: "abgeben" and "aufgeben" are
- English Test
How to Write a Letter Idioms Formal Letter Graduation Songs
Who sings a certain song
|
Ask a question right now..
|