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Thanks!! I appreciate your replies. Yes. you are right. I think the legislation about driving is still effective, so the tenses don't need to be changed, which means his comment is still relevant. I posted a contradictory question. If his
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Greetings, Icadia, Direct speech: It's against the law in our state for her to drive until she has been seizure-free for six months. Indirect speech: 1. The provisions of the legislation have probably not changed by the time of reporting
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
gleb_chebrikoff
4 hr 41 min ago
Tenses, Clauses, Present Tenses, Direct Speech, Determiners, Writing, Sentences, Speaking, Speeches, Conversational, Speech, Indirect
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This is the correct sentence: John said that it is /was against the law in our state for her to drive until she has been * seizure-free for six months. *It will always be "has been", because it is a present-perfect-progressive. John
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A weeks ago. John made a comment below. John's comment: "it's against the law in our state for her to drive until she has been seizure-free for six months." Now. I am reporting what he said, Let's consider his comment
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when i I need to say "she" i I say "he" having slip of tongue, do es this ever happen to even to native speakers?? No. Very rarely, if ever. instead "tell me when he is leaving" i I may say "tell me when is he
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Those particular slips are ones that native speakers don't usually make. The most common native slips I hear are: irregardless (not a word, it's regardless) and supposably (pronounced supposedly). Misplacing the verb isn't a big deal.
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i have a question about using pronouns.sometimes i can use them wrongly without noticing, i mean when i need to say "she" i say "he" having slip of tongue,do this ever happen to even native speakers?? also while speaking and
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2. Transform the following into indirect speech. Nimmi: Sunethra is getting a better salary than you. Why is that? Mrs. Perera: it may be that she is a better typist than I Nimmi: well, I think you type as well as she does or even better. Mrs.
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Hi,
"Go with me, Rama" is in the form of an order, an imperative.
The indirect form of this would be
He told Rama to go with him.
The original indirect speech was in the form of a question.
He asked Rama . . .
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" Will you go with me, Rama?" ---> he ask Rama if Rama would go with him
In my opinion the best answer is: " Go with me, Rama"
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