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Hello Superblack, The expressions Here... be in British English and There... be in American English with a personal pronoun as subject are used without inversion because there are no reasons for it - it is not a question like Where are you? ,
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
gleb_chebrikoff
70 days ago
American English, Pronouns, British English, Questions, Countries, United States, United Kingdom, Great Britain, American, Conversational, Indirect, Languages, Expressions
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Hi,
Vincent, I want to tell you it is great that you are trying to write essays now. This will help your English a lot .
Last Sunday was a fine day. I was waiting for a bus at the bus stop. Suddenly I heard the screeching of brakes.
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My friend ( a non native English speaker, Spanish in fact )and a translator by profession , recently had to write a report about an assault that he experienced. When writing about the actual words that were said to him prior to the assault , he
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I don't think they're watching it to learn English, it's just for fun. The fact that he or she is questioning those lines, means that he/she tries to understand it, and isn't just watching it without any process in mind.
I'm
ESL Vocabulary and Idioms
by
anonymous
187 days ago
Dates, Learning English, Questions, Relationships, Friendships, Students, Friends, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Apologies, Languages
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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
289 days ago
Grammar, Punctuation, Question Marks, Questions, Writing, Sentences, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Students, Languages
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Where seems appropriate, but do we all agree that it basically stands for the defining version of "in which" and it refers to gold? Alan Greenspan is well versed in rhetoric so I doubt there is a questioning to do about his English.
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Hi there! I'm again confused about tag questions :( I got this example from Cambridge book. A: I thought it was rude, didn't you? B: Yes. It was very impolite. I cannot understand why in the example "didn't YOU" is used if
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As a general guideline, whom is considered rather formal, so sentence 1 is fine in a formal setting. In spoken English we like to put the preposition at the end, but whom is really too formal here. Better... Who do I give the money to?
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The New York Times October 8, 2008 Op-Ed Columnist Mud Pies for That One¹ By MAUREEN DOWD Some of John McCain¹s friends, from the good old days when he talked straight, feared that his Greek tragedy would be that he would be defeated by George
misc.writing.screenplays.moderated
by
mc
1 yr 42 days ago
Languages, Countries, Friendships, United States, Colours, Relationships, United Kingdom, Great Britain, American, Friends, Teaching, Questions
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This is a short part of song supreme of R. Williams. So I've got to turn the track up Sit back and watch the royalties stack up But i cant understand it completely What does he want to say? The whole song : Oh it seemed forever stopped today
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How to Write a Letter Idioms Formal Letter Graduation Songs
Who sings a certain song
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