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You could ask your English centers for a web site with information, or make a visit in person to get information. Taking an assessment exam is a good start. Then you will know what you need to study in order to pass the test. I would guess that
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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alpheccastars
286 days ago
Regards, Grammar, Tenses, Punctuation, Spelling, TOEFL, Writing, Sentences, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Mistakes, Conversational, Structures, Languages
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I don't know of a webpage that drills these ideas, but here is some written material that may help. There are, in American English, five types of verb with regard to the pronunciation of the regular past tense. (The spelling rules are
English Audio: Speech and Pronunciation
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califjim
299 days ago
Consonants, American English, Pronunciation, Regards, Tenses, Spelling, Past Tenses, Speaking, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Writing, United States, American, Languages
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Hi,
First a warm welcome. Learning English is not just about learning grammar which is the foundation we have to learn in order to build on. Of course grammar is the most important. Without it, nothing makes sense. Grammar includes all the
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Grammar Geek wrote:
Desert Lord, contribute to the conversation or don't, but do not post merely to show a misspelling or typo. You are not moving the conversation forward by doing so, and I am I getting tired of people finding joy in the
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As an English teacher I can say that according to all the grammar books I've consulted the correct spelling is "didn't use to". the formk is analogous to the past tense - indeed it is a type of past tense. Regards, Einde
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"Youse"? That's funny. It would sound like Brooklyn (NY) talk, sort of like was it the film with Joe ... probably pronounce it "use'to...", not with a "d". Some Londoners say "four-een" while some
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used (common error, but still an error) Yes, it is an error, but unfortunately it's not as widely recognized to be an error as it should be. ... the "use" in "use to" is a normal English verb that happens to no longer be
alt.usage.english
by
evan kirshenbaum
5 yr 318 days ago
Regards, Spelling, Pronunciation, Tenses, Negatives, Mistakes, Context, United Kingdom, Friendships, Speaking, Chat, Writing, Languages, Present Tenses, Negations
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Hello all .
I am a newcomer to this site and it is my first time on this forum.
1. I think some of the tenses are unnecessary. For example, why does English have so many different tenses. In the Chinese language, it uses time reference to
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