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Hi, I have in grammar book example of this : This soup tastes strange . (tastes in this sentence is stative verb , strange is adj ) the translate of this question : the soup strange because the strange describe the pronouns. but if i change the
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I have posted this question on another forum, but I haven't exactly received a satisfactory answer, so here it is:
"I am all that you have home." (If anyone here is a fan of The Decemberists, then they might recognize this line!)
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I can see that it's a 6-letter word only in the main page and while I'm posting this reply. (I need to get used to the new layout of the site! ) As a verb: - is it a stative verb? - is it something that animals can do? - is it something
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Hi,
1. Can an adjective be used after a noun?
eg,
They are having bargains galore .
2. Can you tell me if an adverb can be used after a "be" or stative verb?
eg,
Are you for or against this proposal?
Mike was after Joe.
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Hi, They're not really the same, and no one really includes the other. I think linking verbs and stative verbs are 2 separate categories, but they're also 2 similar groups. They're different according to their definitions: - A linking verb is a
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Eladio,
Sorry, I was too lazy to look up the word for answer , so I threw in a pronoun instead!
Note that other stative verbs have similar "problems" going between the two languages.
No quería and No quiso are another good example.
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Hello Roro
Excellent writing! I believe you are an advanced English learner, at least a learner much more advanced than me.
Anyway, what I feel about the problem you have now is that it rather come from your misunderstanding the tense
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Hi Englishpros,
* The woman is a TV reporter who is standing in the hotel elevator.
1. Someone suggests the sentence above should be wrong. Why?
_________________________________________________________
A stative verb, generally,
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http://ccc.commnet.edu/grammar/progressive.htm #begin quote The progressive forms of a verb indicate that something is happening or was happening or will be happening. When used with the past, the progressive form shows the limited duration of an
misc.education.language.english
by
usenet
5 yr 287 days ago
Regards, Tenses, Difference Between, Nouns, Universities, Pronouns, Constructions, Present Tenses, Simple Present, Dynamic Verbs, Stative Verbs, Simple Past
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BTW, "loving" and "needing" in your sentences are gerunds(nouns).
Yes, you can use progressive. But they convey more meaning than do the normal stative verbs.
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