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I suppose it's possible he's speaking of "the position" as a job classification (singular) . In this case he may be using "vacancy" as uncountable noun. thank you, you are excellent it is very convincing
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The 2009 entry vacancy we currently have is for a position in our investment team. Our 2010 entry holds both investment and accounting vacancies. You say "clearly there must be more than one vacancy." Why "clearly"? It's
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Thanks for the reply . It's also a senstive matter in the culture i live. My friend translated a subtitle of a documentary film. It related to a transgender community. Then i watched the movie. I read the subtitle and i found this sentence:
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1. What does "Go ahead, I'm a sucker for you!"? I'm a lollipod for you? It's a slang right? It's definitely slang, but I don't attribute its origin to the lollipop (note the spelling). I could be way off base.
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
avangi
151 days ago
Nouns, Spelling, Uncountable Nouns, Countable Nouns, Adjectives, Arts, Relationships, Writing, Context, Friendships, Friends, Expressions
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'While' is not an abstract noun when the sentence is about somebody doing something, before they do something else. It is more like a connective word (because, and, or). For example:
'While she waited for the train, she drank a cup
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Hi, Thank you very, very much, Mr Wordy. I'm talking about "misunderstood beauty" in the uncountable sense. And that's exactly what I was looking for. "Beauty" as abstract, uncountable noun.
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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
191 days ago
Expressions, Nouns, Plurals, Difference Between, Uncountable Nouns, Numbers, Clauses, Writing, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Adjectives
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The word effort is frequently used as an uncountable noun. However, for that sentence, I'd probably say "You need to make more of an effort." By that I would basically mean "You need to try harder." It's very general.
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The word effort is frequently used as an uncountable noun. However, for that sentence, I'd probably say "You need to make more of an effort." By that I would basically mean "You need to try harder." It's very general.
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Good luck with the prepositions! On the site In the room On the channel (I think) If there is any mistake / If there are any mistakes Please point it / them out to me In this context, "medium" is the Latin singular of a countable noun.
ESL Basic English Grammar Questions and Help
by
avangi
285 days ago
Nouns, Plurals, Countable Nouns, Prepositions, Uncountable Nouns, Animals, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Context, Mistakes, Apologies
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