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On second thought, I think I once read somewhere that "I've" is used that way in the UK sometimes, maybe for possession. But since I am not sure, it might be very rare,I have never actually "heard" it, and I have probably
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Hi, Kooyeen,
Kooyeen wrote: I know you won't like my answer, but... what's wrong? That part of speech was ok. My goal is to talk like that. Ok, not really like that, but that was not "non-English", so it was ok in the end (I guess).
I
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I am a native English speaker from the U.S. and I agree with Colombo (by the way, your writing in English is great), but it seems every person I have met who speaks English as a foreign language runs into pronunciation as the largest problem.
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Hello Mike in Japan-
Arguments claiming American English to be a “dumbed down” or “lazy” version of British English are based on the erroneous premise that American English is a perversion of British English. Any real linguist will tell you
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Hi Xcats,
This is related to the spelling of the past tense forms of regular verbs; it also applies to the "ing" form.
spelling of regular affirmative past tense forms
Most regular verbs: add -ed
work —worked
help —helped
start —
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From Merriam Webster's :
AIN'T
Etymology: contraction of are not
1 : am not : are not : is not
2 : have not : has not
3 : do not : does not : did not -- used in some varieties of Black English
Usage: Although widely disapproved as
ESL Vocabulary and Idioms
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mister micawber
4 yr 331 days ago
American English, Verbs, Grammar, British English, Constructions, Numbers, Pronunciation, Spelling, English Grammar, Contractions, Dialects
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