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You can use 'can' there, but native speakers normally use simple present instead. Also, please note that 'everyday' is an adjective meaning 'mundane', while 'every day' is a noun or adverb meaning 'each day'.
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Accoding to you, there is no such thing as "adverbial phrase". BUT, yes, there is. I've provided 2 links below for your reference. Perhaps, this may help you clear the confusion.
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
ferdis
71 days ago
Present Progressive, Prepositions, Tenses, Nouns, Adverbs, Present Continuous, Present Tenses, Adjectives, Sentences, References, Business, Career, Continuous Tenses
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"I have a dog at home" "I am a nurse at the hospital" "I have a test tomorrow" "I am a soldier at heart" Whenever, there are nouns after a "to be" or "to have" verb, and then there are
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1) Two people were seriously injured in the accident. 2) The meeting was very badly organised . These are verbs. What you've got there is passive voice, which consists of Auxiliary verb "To Be" + Main Verb in the PAST PARTICIPLE.
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Thanks for your help Mister Micawber. Okay, if we correct "In fall, this season is harvests fruit and rice" with your correction: We've corrected the object "season" by removing it, and the demonstrative noun. We've
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These are two subodinate clauses. Yes, that's why they don't form a sentence. 1) Why are they subordinate clause when they have subjects and verbs ? Eddie, Eddie, Eddie!!! We've been through this before. Almost all clauses have
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I have difficulty distinguishing between
situations where a participle
is used but ambiguous as to whether it is acting as an adjective or
part of a passive. Do you have some guideline I can go
by? One wonders whether anything about your
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read is a verb. You cannot turn it into an adverb or adjective (readingly/readedly). You can only turn nouns into adverbs or adjectives. Would you say walkingly or walkedly? No..
I'm excitedly. This is not a complete sentence. You need a verb
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I would say, in the first instance
"is" is the present tense of "to be", as you say.
"relaxed" is a past participle used as an adjective (attribute)/cf: your body is beautiful.
In the second instance, "restaurant" is absolutely NO adverb;
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The sentence "your body is relaxed" - "is" is present tense of the verb "to be", right? And is 'relaxed' the past participle?
Also, the sentence "the restaurant staff played football against the customers" - what type of words are 'restaurant'
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