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Hello,
How can we combine two sentences with a relative pronoun clause?
Await him
We don't know who he is
Something like " Await him who we don't know who he is"?
Thanks for help.
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The A level Language textbook we use categorises 'my' 'your' 'his' 'her' 'our' and 'their' as possessive pronouns. I think they cannot be pronouns since they do not replace nouns. I have seen them
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It was the fitting into Confucian patterns of conduct and of family and community life rather than blood kinship or ancestry which labeled one as civilized and as Chinese. The sentence is correct and your analysis is right. It is a preparatory
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That would be correct. You just need to add a few capital letters and a full-stop.
The dog barked at my cousin and I.
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The answer to your question is probably not as clearcut as you'd like it to be:
Couple can take either the singular or plural verb. It all depends on whether the couple is seen as one social unit ( a married couple) or whether the members
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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grammarwannabe
43 days ago
American English, Plurals, Pronouns, Marriage, Relationships, Countries, United States, United Kingdom, Great Britain, American, Languages
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By 26? Do you mean By the age of 26?
Only the "must have watched" version sounds okay to me.
Don't forget that the pronoun I is always capitalized in English.
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This is how i created
I don't understand your question.
Are you looking for a correction? If so, your words are not a complete sentence, and the pronoun I is always capitalized in English.
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Are you sure they speak standard American or British English? It sounds like it might be from a sort of dialect of English. Where I live nobody puts that pronoun there. The only meaning it might have, to my ear, is a sort of enthusiastic emphasis,
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Hi. Thank you.
If the phrase "living creatures" were happen to be (for the illustration purpose of asking this question) "a living creature" in the singular, would you say placing a comma before the pronoun
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Hi. Thank you. I think comma would be correct (or possibly optional in this case) before the word "which" in the definition I found in the Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner's English Dictionary. I feel/think the part "that is
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