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Yeah, that's better. Oddly enough, it works with both "should" and "shouldn't," although the meaning is different. (She ate everything in the house and then complained that he should have gone shopping because they were
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OK thank you, let me give it one last shot. Don't tell me I should have gone grocery shopping when you're the one who ate everything while watching a movie. thank you
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It's still too much for one sentence, but at least it makes more sense now. How about this: "Don't tell me I shouldn't have gone grocery shopping. You're the one who ate everything I bought!" or "Don't tell me I
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Thank you Khoff
for 6
Don't tell me I should n't have gone grocery shop when you were loving the snacks/loved the snacks while you were watching the movie.
what this meas or what I'm trying to convey is that
Mr
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1) The battery lasts for/is good for about 6 hours of playtime. 2) time of day/time of night 3) while in an exam/while you were in an exam 4) I've listen ed .... (both options are okay) 5) It has the same number of protons as electrons --
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Could you please take a look at this for me?
1 Battery supports/give approximately 6 hours of playtime. 2 What the best time a day/a night to buy a sandwich at a fastfood place. 3 Have you ever needed to go to the bathroom while you
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Hello!
I have a question on the phrase "along these lines".
When I searched the internet, what I could find was only the use and meaning of that phrase, but the paraphrase was in English. Although I found some webpage saying
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
anonymous
33 days ago
Commas, Punctuation, Translation, Sentences, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Online, Asia, China, Languages
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Hi Avangi I know I should not have butted in but it's too late to regret it now! Unlike Jim, I'm not at all familiar with transformational grammar even though I do remember reading an introduction to it in the 1960s. Besides, grammatical
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Could you kindly explain why THE is or is not used in the following sentences:
The English translation of the Srimad Bhagavatam with comments by AC Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada.
Known as “the ripe fruit of the tree of Vedic
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My guess is that it is a fragment of a sentence. I've never heard it before in my life. Perhaps you may want to post the entire passage so that people can better help you.
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