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Hi, Please take a look at this. ... involved with modern, western "come every two hours and sit in the room." I am pretty sure you can treat "come every two hours and sit in the room" like an uncountable noun. Can I make it a
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Mister Micawber wrote:
1) What can we call the package that helicopters throw on the land when there is a catastrophe happens? -- (Emergency) Aid packages? Air drops?
2) About punctuation, should we punctuate before or after the : She
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Hi,
I think it has been noted in this forum that a genitive (I think it means a noun that has or is from a verbal root) can be (made it to be) a countable noun, possibly like this "a barking of a dog need not be heeded." Here, a barking can be
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Here is an article I’ve found in the interest of singularity and plurality. It may be helpful in answering some of the questions. ___________________________________________________________
Is None Singular or Plural?
By Diane Sandford
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Go to Google:
http://www.google.com
and do a search for:
site:bbc.co.uk "The following are"
(the quotation marks are important)
The Google engine would then go through the BBC site pages and look for
"The following are."
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What is proper?
We saw Dad and Mom's new boat. ( YES! )
We saw Dad's and Mom's new boat ( Wrong! ) Joint possessives
In the case of joint possession, i.e., when two or more people own
something together, place the apostrophe or
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In 1. I would put "new medicine" and "old medicine" in quotation marks to indicate their differences. In 2 it would probably be better to ask for comments in the plural. In 3, remove the question mark which is unnecessary. In 4. Do you mean to say
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Hi again,
Nona, yesss. Tkssss. It is "It used to be "
The rest of the text is identical to my book.
Here is the text:
Running out of gas, Rabbit Angstrom thinks as he stands behind the summer-dusty windows of the Springer Motors
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Hi, I've highlighted your errors. Your main problems are
confusion about plurals, including using 'he' when you mean 'they'.
missing out 'the', 'an' or 'a' when they are needed
a few punctuation and related problems (you don't use a
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My husband the computer programmer doesn't see why anyone would prefer "mouses" to "mice" for the computer device. He says there is very rarely any ambiguity about which sort is being referred to, therefore no need to differentiate the plural
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