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Hello Anon,
If you are in a position of authority, you can probably tell your underlings to "to whatever it takes" and they will follow your command.
When you are requesting help from other people, would you use that phrase?
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Choose me as your best man at your wedding. Or Choose me as your best man for your wedding. Are these sentences ok? What other ways are there to say it.
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Personally, I feel that there is an element missing in this sentence. I may be wrong!
Here is my training of thought:
If the occasion is someone's birthday, then "the shape of the cake" is the birthday?, or wedding based on the
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They held a dinner party to mark the occasion of their fortieth wedding anniversary. Which is the closest sentence to the sentence given above? A) The dinner party they gave was to commemorate forty years of marriage. B) They have been married
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I agree with Philip's comments, but will add my two cents on a couple: 2. ... if/whether she would even consider Christmas ... (This refers to the setting of a future wedding date. Using "regarded" would amount to asking about the
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
yankee
61 days ago
Weddings, Dates, Marriage, Sentences, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Conversational, Christmas, Holidays, Ceremonies
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Hi,
Are you sure 'groom' is the correct word to choose?
Groom = someone who takes care of a horse.
Groom = a man who is getting married at a wedding.
Best wishes, Clive
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' There was a picture of my parents' wedding night , Baba dashing in his black suit and my mother a smiling young princess in white.'
'dashing in his black suit' = adjective phrase
'a smiling young princess in
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1) "dashing" is an adjective here (for meaning, see http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/dashing ). I suppose the word was originally related to the verb "to dash" (of which "dashed" is the past tense), but the
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
mr wordy
114 days ago
Weddings, Tenses, Punctuation, Past Tenses, Marriage, Adjectives, Writing, Sentences, Colours, Structures, Ceremonies
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There was a picture of my parents' wedding night, Baba dashing in his black suit and my mother a smiling young princess in white. My question: 1) Why do we have dashing here but not dashed ? 2) Why is there no to be verb before a smiling
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1. What is the difference?
Before they had gone up to the second floor, they fell.
They had fallen before they went (up?) to the second floor.
2. I think the two are similar in that the past pefect tense kind of does the work of
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