We have partnered with TradePub to bring you free industry magazines and resources - no coupons or credit cards required!
Visit: englishforums.tradepub.com
-
Sorry, I saw some of your posts were deleted while in moderation. I tried to at least bring one back here, but I don't think I am able to. I'll try to answer anyway. Really? Is that why most language forums are filled with technical
ESL Linguistics Discussion Forum
by
kooyeen
191 days ago
Tenses, Dialects, Articles, Vocabulary, Punctuation, Question Marks, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, ESL, Apologies, Languages, Styles
-
I'd say the first one is more likely to be used in referring to a specific occasion, while the second is more likely to refer to habitual behavior. But both would work in either situation. (They're both the same in not being sentences -
-
Hello. Will Can you correct my English if any? Could you correct my English if there are any mistakes please? M: I need two copies of today's Daily Yomiuri. - OK F: They Its were just sold out. - It's just sold out you can try the
-
If you're writing informally for yourself and friends, use your own judgment. If you're writing for a specific publication, use the style manual they recommend. Often the answer is different depending on where your article is published. My
-
Seems pretty balanced article. (Spoiler: the beeeg winner will be the first to write something that everyone with a video cell phone will have to watch three times a day on the subway, lunch, and in the checkout line)
misc.writing.screenplays.moderated
by
sammyo
1 yr 285 days ago
Articles, Negatives, Punctuation, Question Marks, Countries, United States, Relationships, Careers, Business, Arts, Training, Spring, Negations
-
Hi Yankee, Yankee wrote: Hi Hoa Thai To me, your examples are not comparable, and I'm also not sure what you're getting at. In your first sentence, the use of the article 'the' makes a huge difference in the meaning. recently: Do you remember
-
Jackson6612 wrote:
Sentence #5 is really a statement. It could be the heading for an article in a magazine: " why men act more like women these days."
Do you mean that question mark could not be used at the end of that sentence?
-
Sentence #5 is really a statement. It could be the heading for an article in a magazine: " why men act more like women these days."
Do you mean that question mark could not be used at the end of that sentence?
-
Overall, it looks fine, Mountain, including the section of shareholder activism. I have fixed some minor puntuation, etc and made some suggestions for rephrasing. The question marks indicate suggested changes that I am not sure preserve your
-
Hyundai surpassed (the???) Japanese rival Nissan
Drop the brackets and the question marks, otherwise correct.
you need the definite article.
the Japanese rival: Nissan (there is only one rival company called Nissan)
"too much of a good
- English Test
How to Write a Letter Idioms Formal Letter Graduation Songs
Who sings a certain song
|
Ask a question right now..
|