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Greetings, Coloraday, an interesting observation you have made on the usage of these adjectives, and thank you for sharing it. However, there are strong reasons to prefer only one of the options suggested in the multiple-choice cloze, viz.
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Dear friend, but is sometimes used to mean 'only', and this usage is considered formal, eg ...Napoleon and Marie Antoinette, to name but two who had stayed in the great state rooms. Respectfully, Gleb Chebrikoff
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Is as well as considered a parenthical phrase? Should it be set off with commas?
Thanks!
My non-linguistic view thinks not. I may be wrong but one of the "as well as" usages has a prepositional property which is typically
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
dimsumexpress
3 days ago 7:55 pm
Articles, Prepositions, Clauses, Commas, Punctuation, Relationships, Writing, Business, Usages, Friendships, Careers, Friends
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It makes me contented to realise that you have made sense of the striking difference between not... but vs and , so this 'one thing' you are referring to is the last on the agenda, and may I be clear about two points. First, the omission
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I've been told by British friends that "different to" is basically the British equivalent of the American "different than": Neither is approved of by hardcore prescriptivists, but everybody uses them anyway. The American
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Could you tell me if the following sentence sounds idiomatic from a native speaker's viewpoint? "I need to slam-dunk her a quick one" It may well get a laugh from Al Bundy in the context of a TV sitcom, but I think it would be
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Do/does/did is not used in questions 1. with forms of to be : Is he happy? Were they swimming? 2. with perfect and past perfect auxiliaries : Have you seen him? Had it already begun? 3. sometimes with have/has/had when the verb is in the
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
cool breeze
11 days ago
Tenses, Clauses, Pronouns, Auxiliaries, Past Perfect, Whom, Past Tenses, Modal Auxiliaries, Relationships, Writing, Usages, Friendships, Friends
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Is it supposed to evoke the violence, the quickness, the sure thing, the ostentation, all of the above? It's supposed to evoke the quickness. It was uttered by Al Bundy from Married with Children. You must've watched it and you probably
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Both is not needed. "Kate's parents aren't home" is perfectly clear as is. Both assumes two and parents assumes two. Yes, you could also say "Neither of Kate's parents is home." (Do not use neither with not -- this
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I think I might use this expression to mean that somebody doesn't focus on details. Whether that would be a compliment or not depends on the issue at hand. You know how Michael is. He likes to do everything in broad strokes. It's up to
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