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Hi,
Sorry, but this is no better than before.
No educated English speaker would write a letter like this with just one paragraph. And no university would bother to read it. They'd just throw it in the garbage. Do you care about
Formal, General & Business Letter Writing
by
clive
7 days ago
Universities, Paragraphs, Writing, Letters, Schools, Students, Friendships, Speaking, Chat, Apologies, Expressions
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Welcome to EF, badgrammar! I hope you'll soon be able to change your screen name to Good Grammar. It is correct to use the possessive form whose as a relative pronoun whenever a possessive form is needed: This house, whose windows are shut,
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Sorry to butt in like this. I'm sure Clive will give his expert advice but let me try to explain it the way I see it (from a non native speaker's point of view).
Regarding the New York sentence, since both the living/working
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
dimsumexpress
10 days ago
Past Perfect, Simple Past, Past Tenses, Sentences, Online, Websites, Usages, Speaking, Speeches, Simple Tenses, Apologies
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Dear all
Could you please check the invitation letter?
I would like to invite all of our senior staff to volunteer fare-well and welcome party at this evening, to 5 mins speech to current volunteer and new comer. I am so sorry to late
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Is this writting writing natural? Please cheaking check my writting writing .
While I was walking to school, I noticed a woman approaching me on a bicycle, talking on her cell phone. When she and I nearly collided, she gave me a dirty look. For
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Hello Udee,
Thanks for your introduction. Unfortunately I’m not an English teacher and I’m afraid that my English wasn’t as fluent as yours. Sorry about that.
However I have the same problem than you, I need to improve my English skills and
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I'd love to rent a helicopter, but there is/are none available. Isn't either formally correct? Formally? No. Sorry. No prize for you on that one today! is is the "correct" (formal) form given in the more conservative grammar
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I feel your pain, but you're talking about a lot of work. I just don't have the time. Sorry. Actually, "e" is very close. "Flying" is trochaic (strong-weak), and could be reversed by using "which fly," which
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i've got to do something or i've got a sore throat... these are examples of bad grammar slipping into american slang. Sorry, Anon, but the expression "have got to do something" (meaning "must do something") is quite
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
yankee
18 days ago
Capital Letters, Writing, References, Business, Career, United States, Usages, Speaking, Chat, American, Friendships, Apologies, Expressions
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Ooh, what's wrong, right clothes for inhibitions? / You couldn't afford the price of admission. Now the girl in this scene is wearing black body-fitting clothes. So is the guy telling her the clothes are not just for looking and she
General English Vocabulary & Idiom Questions
by
delmobile
24 days ago
Context, Relationships, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Friends, Careers, Business, References, Career, Apologies, Expressions
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