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Helllo!
I have several questions all related to seasons? I have grammar doubts. Could you help me and correct me? Thank you.
1) In Argentina we have four seasons or In Argentina there are four seasons. Are both correct?
2) Don´t forget to
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Is this a case in which the verb complain is a transitive verb? It's matter of terminology and depends on what one wants to call an object. In Scandinavian grammatical terminology a clause can be the object of a verb : Students know the
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would it be correct to say that you'll be getting "your money's worth with the apple computer" basically im concerned about the proper preposition to use.and again forgive the lowercase
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Hi
1. Going to the movies is an idiom so use it.
2. Sure, you can end a sentence with a preposition.
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I tend to think that the following is a complete sentence. This is for you. What bothers me is that I anticipate that the is requires a noun or adjective on the right because it is a linking verb. A prepositional phrase that modifies the verb
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I did a research on the philosophical grounds of law, for which I won a prize afterwards. "In which" means that one object or event occurs within another. Example: This is the book in which I found the famous quote.
"For
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
nanatoo
73 days ago
Grammar, Prepositions, Sentences, References, Business, Career, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Colours, Languages, Quotations
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Hi grammarians! Certainly. The sentence in case, "I told her about the meeting," shows that the prepositional phrase is a noun by its use as the object of the verb, told. In my opinion, there are no hard and fast rules in life. For as
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They are nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, prepositions and conjunctions. It would be good if you made an effort yourself first, and we will check them.
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I don't understand how to explain these sentences. Both are grammatically correct, right? How is 'yesterday' working in this sentence? Why can it be moved before and after 'after school'? Are these just two seperate
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Exactly why Dryden objected to it, I'm not sure. I always thought it had to do with trying to force-fit English grammar into Latin grammar. Anyway, for those who are interested here is a site on the subject that seems fairly well researched
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