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Dear Avangi,
Thanks for the explanation. In "Scots are standing up for the freedom to have made it", is my understanding correct if I break down the time line for the sentence?
1st part of the sentence: Scots are standing up
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Hi Both if-clause constructions in sentence #1 and #2 are possible I think. The first sentence is a regular if-clause. The second one starts with a modal verb, which comes from the full construction 'If there should be any...'. That's
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Great Clive!
You´re right. I was refering to sentences like the last two. And I found that you added a ,(comma) in number 3 examples. So if I happen to see sentences like this: "On Saturdays I go to the park", I have to add the comma,
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it's basically very good, I made a couple suggestions:
Dear Mr. Gray, This is a letter from xxxxxx, I am a student who attends the Behavioral Intervention Center that you manage.
I am writing to address a recent incident I was
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I apologize for the double post but here is the final product. I am writing a letter to apologize to my principal for arriving at school intoxicated, but oblivious. I need a grammer EXPERT to point out any wrongs in this letter please, I also want
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Hi If you're making questions out of normal sentences, you simply have to look at the verbs that are in it. It's not difficult to find out. I am tall. --> Am I tall? (if the verb 'to be' (am,are,was,were) is the only verb
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To whom i t this may concern: I was contact ed by email about your chat moderator position and was asked to explain why I think I would be a good moderator. First of all, when I hear the word moderator, I think of the word pressure. I can only
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I know where to go. (same sentence - no case conflict) I'm as comfortable saying that "where" is what I know and "to go" answers the question; as I am to say that "to go" is what I know and "where"
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In this case, I think which and that are both possible. According to most grammar books, you can use which and that interchangeably in restrictive clauses, although there are several occasions on which that must be used or when 'that' is
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Normal 0 false false false RU X-NONE X-NONE MicrosoftInternetExplorer4 Hello, Raja, It goes without saying that there is no blame in being a non-native speaker and a layperson in linguistic science, so
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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gleb_chebrikoff
10 days ago
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