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. I don't think that suffer is always a mental process at all, particularly as in your sentence, where suffered a seizure means underwent a seizure, had a seizure -- material. Quoted is verbal , I presume. .
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Hello todorovaska, and welcome to the English Forums.
1. In English, we don't capitalize "you."
2. You also use commas incorretly - never use a comma between the subject and verb as you have here: I, am the person. Almost all
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. Where the same meaning is intended, there is no difference: ASSUME , verb : take to be the case or to be true; accept without verification or proof ( "I assume his train was late" ) PRESUME , verb : take to be the case or to be true;
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Why is "He bought something" a correct sentence? cause I have learned that if there is no time-indicator in the sentence that it as to be "He has bought something". You have it backwards! If there is a time indicator you
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__ (use?? strong positive verb) test and measurement equipment in performance evaluation. Please suggest a positive verb. The context is resume. Thanks.
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Hi, I'm portuguese too.. I was looking for something related with languages when I found this message. If you are still sending CVs, you might want to consider revising it...specially by using active verbs at the beginning of the sentences.
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Tens of thousands of Koreans took (to) the street s Monday to protest (against)
the government's decision to resume importing US beef, which had been
suspended for five years due to mad cow disease. The government is
the ban, but it
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Hi,
Welcome to the Forum.
1. Is "resume responsibility" OK or only "assume responsibility"? Or both OK?
First you assume responsibility.
Then you give it up or relinquish it.
Then you resume it. 'Resume'
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Hi, everybody, I am a newcomer here and I would highly appreciate it if you would answer the following:
1. Is "resume responsibility" OK or only "assume responsibility"? Or both OK?
2. Is "resume the expenses"
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My guess would be single-n. Since it's a proper noun, you'd mess with it as little as possible.
I don't know if there's a rule. The adjectives are sometimes surprising, eg, "Shavian" for G.B.Shaw; "Keynesian"
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