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I would be greatful for a few tips, many thanks..
Elementary level
Describing a person's physical appearance. Parts of the body, colours and clothing (please don’t focus solely on body parts etc but consider physical
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
nickydee
191 days ago
Articles, Grammar, Verbs, Plurals, Difference Between, Prepositions, Nouns, Adverbs, Commas, Writing, Sentences, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Languages
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Hi,
I need some help on making this response sound more intellectual, please help
me.
Explain below why you believe you should be
considered a disadvantaged applicant:
I
grew up in rural India
until the age of nine . At that
ESL Essay, Writing World
by
minu21
205 days ago
Regards, Verbs, Difference Between, Prepositions, Tenses, Nouns, Adverbs, Commas, Past Tenses, Writing, Sentences, Countries, United Kingdom, Languages, Mortgage
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I would be greatful for a few tips, many thanks..
Elementary level
Describing a person's physical appearance. Parts of the body, colours and clothing (please don’t focus solely on body parts etc but consider physical
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
nickydee
217 days ago
Regards, Grammar, Verbs, Plurals, Difference Between, Prepositions, Nouns, Pronouns, Past Tenses, Writing, Sentences, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Languages
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I would be greatful for a few tips, many thanks..
Elementary level
Describing a person's physical appearance. Parts of the body, colours and clothing (please don’t focus solely on body parts etc but consider physical characteristics
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
nickydee
218 days ago
Grammar, Verbs, Plurals, Difference Between, Prepositions, Tenses, Clauses, Nouns, Commas, Past Tenses, Writing, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Languages
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I understand this sentence is not the best example, but my point is how to deal with repeated prepositions of noun objects with a preposition-having-verb.
For example: in using DEMAND A OF B
let's suppose A include multiple nouns
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Hi, Could we have used the singular verb "differs" in your sentence? I think you are using the word "usage" as an uncountable noun. What is the difference between yours and this? New and old equipment needs (need?) to be fixed.
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
anonymous
259 days ago
Verbs, Singular Verbs, Difference Between, Prepositions, Nouns, Uncountable Nouns, Football, Sentences, Countries, United States, Usages, American, Singular, Sports
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Tangentially, let me observe that some verbs accompanied by a for phrase typically take an object before the for phrase and some don't. When no object intervenes, I tend to hear the noun after for as a kind of object, hearing the for as part
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1. "My book is over there" "The cookies are for everyone" What do the prepositional phrases in these sentences function as? 2. With stative verbs, are there any limits in adverbs? "I have a story to tell" "I have
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I don't know much about phrasal verbs (they hadn't yet been invented when I was in school), but I take "graduated" as a simple verb in the simple past tense, and "with first-class honors" as a prepositional phrase,
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Hi, Is the syntax below OK?
He (subject) graduated with (phrasal verb) first-class honors (Noun) from Hong Kong University (prepositional phrase) in the 1960s (prepositional phrase).
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