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Hello! I'm writing a letter of motivation to our local office for international relations. So I have to convince them to accept me and to arrange an exchange with an American university. This is a very raw version but I would appreciate it if
Formal, General & Business Letter Writing
by
nik24
23 hr 30 min ago
Universities, Motivational Letter, Writing, Business, Letters, Schools, Relationships, Students, Sentences, Careers, United States, American, Classes
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1 Pushing your dentist appointment back a month will not only affect the alignment of your teeth but you'll be pushing the end day of treatment back a month. The less you tighten the braces the less staight your teeth become in a shorter
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In American English, both are considered correct.
In fact, "beat" seems to be more popular than "beaten" in common conversational English.
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Hello,
I would like to know the meaning of the phrase "(when I) say froggy, jump". Does it come from a traditional children song or game?
I found it on http://www.wrensworld.com/froggyjump.htm . But I also found "say
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My American Heritage Dictionary has it listed as one word (although when I went to look it up, I expected to find both). Therefore, I will verify both Clive's answer and mine.
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It depends on whom you ask. I'm sure nearly all Americans would use a comma after May 29 and probably the majority of Britons too. However, some British newspapers such as The Guardian have a dislike for commas in dates and write the date as
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Hi!
I have to write a letter of expression to an American college? It's my exam and I have no idea about that. Please HELP ME!!!
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i've got to do something or i've got a sore throat... these are examples of bad grammar slipping into american slang. Sorry, Anon, but the expression "have got to do something" (meaning "must do something") is quite
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
yankee
17 days ago
Capital Letters, Writing, References, Business, Career, United States, Usages, Speaking, Chat, American, Friendships, Apologies, Expressions
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First lesson: In American English, we capitalize "I" and "American" and "English". We don't use capital letters in the middle of words. And we spell out "please." Okay, I realize you are asking for help
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Does everything have to be in full sentences? I mean African Americans have their own English lingos and they can describe a whole paragraph in a few words. What's the difference between Black English and Standard American English?
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