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What is a good sentence for using the word " economics " . Tere is not aloud to be any suffixes Suffixes are not allowed. Do you mean that no suffixes are allowed in the entire sentence? Or that suffixed forms of "economics"
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Hi I didn't mean to undermine your answer. I'm sorry if I implied such a thing, but I was merely giving an example and saying that, given the actual pronunciation of most of these suffixes, I find it more logical to use -ize, since people
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I teach some students Japanese in English. Could you correct that, please? This article explains an honorific expressiono of Japanese.
Thanks.
Best wishes, Lucas
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In Japanese, there are 3 differnt kinds of ways to
ESL Essay, Writing World
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lucas21c
194 days ago
Essays, Articles, Writing, Students, Asia, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Usages, Languages, Suffixes, Prefixes
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It seems to me that reading comprehension skills are very difficult for many English learners. What aspects would you like to emphasise in teaching reading comprehension? Or should it be taught at all? Is it enough if students just read on their
Teaching English (TEFL)
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successor
322 days ago
Suffixes, Prefixes, Vocabulary, Paragraphs, Relationships, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Friendships, Teaching, Students, Languages, Writing, Context, Friends
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Phonetic spelling as in subject... I was watching a BBC programme on Edward Hopper, which relied strongly on an interview ... this is it found in some carefully-delineated dialect of artistic America, or is it perhaps just one man's
alt.usage.english
by
ross howard
5 yr 169 days ago
Spelling, Dialects, Phonetics, Pronunciation, Interviews, Prefixes, Countries, United States, Speaking, Writing, Suffixes
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In Agatha Christie's Murder in Mesopotamia there is ... I now wonder why it doesn't occur more often. Commentals? FWIW, the related words assume, consume, presume and subsume also go to -sumption. Maybe it's because some of the noun
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Condoleeza Rice Condoleezza. Her parents derived it from the Italian "con dolcezza" (with sweetness), which accounts for the double z, but makes it harder to explain why a c was removed *and* another e was added. in her testimony today
alt.usage.english
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richard sabey
5 yr 228 days ago
Dates, Spelling, Whom, Football, Nouns, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Speaking, Writing, Speeches, Sports, Languages, Suffixes, Loan
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} The elements of my e-mail address are all there in ASCII } text for anyone or any bot that wants to look at the source } language. You haven't eliminated the possibility of a bot } being able to decipher e-mail addresses. You've only
alt.usage.english
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r j valentine
5 yr 276 days ago
Spelling, Business, Countries, Friendships, United States, Speaking, Chat, Writing, Careers, Punctuation, Languages, Suffixes, Numbers, Degree
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Latin used "be" (sum, esse, fui, futurus) as an auxiliary, but only for the combination of the passive voice in the perfect tenses; the perfect active and the present and imperfect passive used suffixes and stem change: OK, but when you
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Can anyone point out the gender of the word 'soldier' ? Was at any point in the history of the word any masculine gender explicitly associated with its meaning ? The etymology is at , even with a paragraph of "word history".
alt.usage.english
by
jerry friedman
6 yr 18 days ago
Genders, Paragraphs, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Friendships, Speaking, Chat, Writing, Languages, Suffixes
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