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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
193 days ago
Tenses, Dialects, Articles, Vocabulary, Punctuation, Question Marks, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, ESL, Apologies, Languages, Styles
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Did you remember how to use will to form the future? Did you remember that the present tense is used for future time in an if -clause? Did you notice the question mark at the end? Did you remember how to invert subject and verb to form a question? CJ
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Welcome to English Forums! ... which one is the commonest expression? I was wondering if you could help me is the most common form where I live. (No question mark; it's not a question.) CJ
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The first is correct. "Did you know" is a past tense. The present tense would be "Do you know". It is a question, so you need a question mark. You could also say "Did/Do you know that I am intending/I plan to buy an iPod
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Which sentence is correct? and why please? I think the second sentence is correct because when you use the word "did" the verb must be in present tense. Do I put question mark after the sentence? Did you know that I bought an iPod Touch?
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A lot of your phonetic symbols for vowels come out as question marks on my computer, so that's not telling me a lot.
It looks to me like M-W has the pronunciations that I, personally, use most, so that's the one I would trust most.
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"... when you have both finished" sounds awkward, is it a common sentential constuct? Yes, it's a normal construct
And your sentence "What were the questions like?" looks good but can I also say "How were the questions like?"? No, but you could
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Peaceblinkfriend wrote: Hi all agian I would like to know the differences between these pairs of sentences. Which is correct and why ? 1. a) What are the difference s between these two ? OK. This suggests that there is (or may be) more than one
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A patient , accusing a doctor of malpractice , will find it difficult to prove damage unless there is another doctor to testify about proper medical procedures.
Sequence of tenses is important for not causing ambiguity and you will realise
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Have a look at the following sentence.
1.
A patient accusing a doctor of malpractice will
find it difficult to prove damage unless there is another doctor to testify about proper medical procedures.
In the above sentence we have
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