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Hi guys,
In American English, a doctor who specialises in internal medicine is called an "internist". What about in Britain?
Thanks a lot
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Could you please help me to complete a chat of British teenage friends with the phases that best fit it. For each gap choose either A or B.
A: (1)__
B: Yeah, great! I’ve decided to (2)________________ to a new iPod.
A: (3)
English Audio: Speech & Pronunciation
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triumph1
65 days ago
Difference Between, American English, British English, Speak English, Relationships, Speaking, Chat, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Friendships, United States, American, Languages, Friends
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It's not "Football"! Football is the sports with strong men and, well, footballs. Soccer is "Fussball" or "Foodbal" in english, closer to the german word! I'm English but most of the time I don't have a
Basic English Grammar Questions
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anonymous
152 days ago
American English, British English, Football, Spelling, Rugby, Writing, United Kingdom, Sports, Countries, Great Britain, United States, American, Apologies, Languages
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The only way to hear a difference is listening to contrasting pairs, in my opinion. Minimal pairs, you know. Beat - bit fool - full etc. If you have such major problems, then maybe you could start with an accent reduction course. For American
English Audio: Speech & Pronunciation
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kooyeen
160 days ago
Accents, American Accents, American English, British English, Online, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, United States, American, Languages, Training
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What is 'the/a short end of the deal'? -- the disadvantageous side. Does this date expression 7/5 mean 7th of May? -- Or the 5th of July. No matter what any style guide tells you, there will always be confused readers if you use numerals only.
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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mister micawber
171 days ago
American English, Vocabulary, Abbreviations, Dates, British English, Spelling, Countries, United States, United Kingdom, Great Britain, American, Styles, Languages, Expressions
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What is 'the/a short end of the deal'? Does this date expression 7/5 mean 7th of May? Is there any difference in British English and American English? Thank you for your help.
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Don't worry: native speakers don't agree on prepositions, either. Some say in/on an elevator; some say in/on a chair; and in California, you stand IN line, but in New York you stand ON line. Furthermore, there are some differences between
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Hello Superblack, The expressions Here... be in British English and There... be in American English with a personal pronoun as subject are used without inversion because there are no reasons for it - it is not a question like Where are you? ,
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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gleb_chebrikoff
179 days ago
American English, Pronouns, British English, Questions, Countries, United States, United Kingdom, Great Britain, American, Conversational, Indirect, Languages, Expressions
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But to some people, that sounds wrong, doesn't it?-- It doesn't sound 'wrong'; it sounds hyper-correct, i.e. the writer thought he should use it there to be correct...but he shouldn't. "Speakers of British English usually say it is a long
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Thank you very much for the prompt reply.
So, if the line is in the present tense, you say "It has been exaxtly five years since her father died" but not so in the past tense?
Um, someone has just introduced me to a Longman link
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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anonymous
185 days ago
American English, Tenses, Present Tenses, British English, Past Tenses, Countries, United States, United Kingdom, Great Britain, American, Languages
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