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Now if I look up "are," the dictionary tells me that it is the present plural of "be." But what I would expect is that it would tell me that it is the present plural of "am" or "is" because those are the
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
cool breeze
37 days ago
Plurals, Tenses, Present Tenses, Past Perfect, Gerunds, Subjunctives, Present Perfect, Past Tenses, Adjectives, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Context, Languages
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Hi Anon Part of your difficulty might be due to the fact that you have some typos/errors in your sentences. I'm at your dad ' s house. Are you Brittany's brother. You add an apostrophe and an S ( 's ) to the end of a noun to
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
yankee
39 days ago
Simple Present, Plurals, Possessives, Tenses, Nouns, Present Tenses, Punctuation, Apostrophes, Football, Sentences, Simple Tenses, Sports
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Hi I tried to amend the text and to collect the basic Standard British grammar rules according to books and teachers. Any comment? The Convention on the Rights of the Child establishes standards which the laws in many countries cannot achieve /
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is Is the word choose plural or singular ? I think you're asking with respect to the present tense. He chooses. They choose. Plural. Don't forget capitalization and punctuation when asking your questions. CJ
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Nouns, pronouns: 1st person singular: I plural: we 2nd person singular: you plural: you 3rd person singular: he / she /it / a rabbit plural: they / rabbits Present tense 'be: 1st person singular: am plural: are 2nd person singular:
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There are some suggestions which might be of use. We use it when referring to the decision which has been just made (in the moment of speech) It is a nice car! I will probably buy one. We don't use it when implying something planned
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"become" = base form; "became" = past; "become" = past participle. Always use the past participle in the present perfect: I have EATEN; she has GONE; they have BECOME relics. (Also in the past perfect: I, you, he,
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'Sales' is plural: have slowed. I'd use the present perfect as well --- it's a change over time.
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What topics in English are relevant to this? There are four wrong answers and one right one (D). That means there are at least four topics in English that are relevant to working out the answer. There are four choices that you should be able to
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
califjim
97 days ago
Plurals, Clauses, Present Tenses, Past Perfect, Present Perfect, Past Tenses, Writing, Sentences, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Languages
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1. Uncle Joe and his family have decided to stay at our house during the December holiday.-- 3rd person plural subject ( 'Uncle Joe and his family' = they) 2. Uncle Joe and his family had decided to stay at our house during the December holiday
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