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) An adjective is a part of speech that modifies a noun or a pronoun. -- OK ) The exam was adjourned since the the professor was ill. ) The government has adjudged that the country's economy is experiencing hard times so the tax rates will be
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
mr wordy
163 days ago
Tenses, Nouns, Pronouns, Punctuation, Spelling, Contractions, Pronunciation, Hyphenation, Adjectives, Sentences, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Speaking, Speeches
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Would you say "the party would " or "the law would incriminate people who blah blah blah" instead of "the party will" or "the law will"? You can use either one. If it is enacted, the law will ... vs. If it
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Would you say "the party would " or "the law would incriminate people who blah blah blah" instead of "the party will" or "the law will"? You can use either one. If it is enacted, the law will ... vs. If it
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How to pronouce Either when I say "I don't know either". Pronouce as "ai" or "i:" Main Entry: 1 ei·ther Pronunciation:
\ ˈ ē- th ər also ˈ ī-\
The word can be pronounced either way, as
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Cool Breeze wrote: In Old English the pronoun was ic and it became reduced to i in the 12th century. People began to capitalize it in the mid-13th century to mark it clearly as a distinct word. In those days everything was written by hand and it
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Anonymous wrote: Ok, I see you didn't get it. I will repeat it again. Accents and intonation aren't the same things. You can emphasize something without speaking a perfect accent, let's say American one. Just rise a pitch of your voice at the
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Forbes wrote: Cool Breeze wrote: Fortunately English is structurally so simple...
? Hi Forbes In the days of Old English the grammar of the language was more complicated than it is today: nouns had three genders, and there were even
ESL Linguistics Discussion Forum
by
cool breeze
2 yr 129 days ago
Nouns, Verbs, Tenses, Grammar, Plurals, Negatives, Spelling, Pronouns, Pronunciation, Genders, Relative Pronouns
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Saska wrote:
Guest wrote: Why many foreign speakers have such problems with the English language? I mean, I came to the U.S. about two years ago, and in the beginning I've had problems with the language (probably just like eveybody else),
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Hi Yuki, thank you for your opinion. L.Yuki wrote: Hmm I normally heard people say how are you as well.
Though, my native American friend told me it doesn't really matter how you stress it. Just depends on the situation, you can even stress
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I don't think there is a hard and fast rule here. However:
If you have a two syllable word that ends with an 'a', it's typical that the vowel in the first is short. Like 'dada', 'feta', etc. This is not a rule so much as a pattern that should
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