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Since this is a forum for English grammar and vocabulary, I will assume you want us to correct your sentence, rather than to contribute to a poll of some sort.
Capitalize think . Use a period rather than a question mark at the end of each
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Would you say "You're as slow as me?" or "You're as slow as I am?"
I believe the poster is following the American convention for the use of quotes.
I assume you'd agree that the first question mark is
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I believe the poster is following the American convention for the use of quotes.
I assume you'd agree that the first question mark is superfluous, but is the American convention really to put the final question mark inside the quotes? I
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Your punctuation is wonky. You don't need question marks inside ... I believe the poster is following the American convention for the use of quotes. CJ
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Both are natural to me.
Your punctuation is wonky. You don't need question marks inside the quotes, you need one question mark at the end of your question, outside the quotes. (Unusually, these sentences might be intoned as questions, in
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So, if I were to construct a sentence that began as a question but ended as a sentence, which punctuation mark should I use. For instance: "What did you think of him because I thought he was great." OR "What did you think of him
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
anonymous
292 days ago
Grammar, Punctuation, Question Marks, Questions, Writing, Sentences, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Students, Languages
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Hi, I have trouble with the following sentence, Everyone was so busy, there was just time for "Hi", "Bye" and no "What's up dude?" Do we treat the following, "Hi" "Bye" "What's up
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Hi Clive,
Could you give us more explanation about your points because I afree Newguest and I didn't understand your reason. (Should I use a question mark?)
Take care.
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Why is it awkward? I would say "after every sentence" but I understand each perfectly well. Could someone explain why it is awkward?
It's "slightly awkward and ambiguous" to me because it appears to literally mean one
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You should not put after each sentence. Are both correct? Is there any difference? Thanks. I think this needs some context to really make sense. Still, as a strictly standalone sentence I an inclined to go with "You should not put a question
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