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Hi,
Would you say an adjective is a phrase/clause It's neither. An adjective is a word.
that tells something about a noun as to what it is, which one it is, and how many there are. Yes
Does it tell any other things about a noun (if I
ESL Basic English Grammar Questions and Help
by
clive
192 days ago
Expressions, Nouns, Plurals, Difference Between, Uncountable Nouns, Numbers, Clauses, Writing, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Adjectives
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Hi.
Would you say an adjective is a phrase/clause that tells something about a noun as to what it is, which one it is, and how many there are. Does it tell any other things about a noun (if I phrased my question correctly)?
Can we say
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The only thing that can come after a preposition to form a
prepositional phrase is a noun phrase, usually a noun accompanied by
its preceding determiner and perhaps an adjective. A relative
clause may be added. The noun itself may be a gerund.
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
califjim
2 yr 27 days ago
Verbs, Dates, Prepositions, Clauses, Nouns, Adverbs, Noun Phrases, Gerunds, Uncountable Nouns, Countable Nouns, Determiners
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Goodman wrote: Yoong Liat wrote: Neeraj Jain wrote:
Hi Goodman,
I guess that you cannot use "troubles". The right word is "trouble".
Goodman wrote: Jain is saying that you should use 'trouble' , not 'troubles'. Trouble is
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Yoong Liat wrote: Neeraj Jain wrote:
Hi Goodman,
I guess that you cannot use "troubles". The right word is "trouble".
Goodman wrote: Jain is saying that you should use 'trouble' , not 'troubles'. Trouble is usually an uncountable
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Neeraj Jain wrote: Hi Goodman,
I guess that you cannot use "troubles". The right word is "trouble". Goodman wrote: If y ou face run into troubles , call me. Jain is saying that you should use 'trouble' , not 'troubles'. Trouble is usually
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Yoong Liat wrote: Neeraj Jain wrote:
Hi Goodman,
I guess that you cannot use "troubles". The right word is "trouble".
Hi Jain I agree with you. Trouble is usually an uncountable noun. Are you having trouble / with your car? Plural
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Neeraj Jain wrote: Hi Goodman,
I guess that you cannot use "troubles". The right word is "trouble". Hi Jain I agree with you. Trouble is usually an uncountable noun. Are you having trouble with your car? get/run into trouble Your troubles
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Hi,
Unfakeable demonstrations of a superiority that has as least some underlying genetic component are almost unfailingly attractive to the opposite sex.
1. Does 'a' there indicate it is a special kind of superiority and not the superiority
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Hi,
How2die had this sentence in his post and I want to ask some questions on it. You can kindly give a general answer that will encompass all or answer individually.
Unfakeable demonstrations of a superiority that has as least some
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