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To whom i t this may concern: I was contact ed by email about your chat moderator position and was asked to explain why I think I would be a good moderator. First of all, when I hear the word moderator, I think of the word pressure. I can only
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Hi Adeel, How soon do you need this? I'd need at least a couple of hours and, unfortunately, I am juggling too many things in my life right now. I can only help you in short spurts. You should also know that writing is not something that
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
chiliblossom
12 days ago
Resume, Universities, Whom, Cover Letter, Curriculum Vitae, Motivational Letter, Writing, Sentences, Business, Students, Schools, Letters, Qualifications, Resumes, Scholarship
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Essentially correct, but rather awkward. Her reputation has afforded her a host of
longstanding patients whom she does not deserve to lose through
bureaucratic red tape.
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you need another comma, like this: To have a friend as good as John, with whom I
shared various ideas and had frequent discussions surrounding the
nature of climate change, has proved invaluable.
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Your sentence is fine. I would just suggest a few changes: To have a good friend like John, with whom I SHARE various ideas and HAVE frequent discussions ABOUT climate change, has proved invaluable.
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Dear Megalo, I would phrase it this way: To have such a good friend in John, with whom I shared various ideas and with whom I had so frequently discussed about the nature of climate change has proved invaluable.
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Completing our team is the firm of EE, with whom we have worked in the past. or Completing our team is the firm of EE of whom we have worked with in the past. or Completing our team is the firm of EE who we have worked with in the past.
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I'm having trouble explaining "why" a sentence can't have the following structure. Wrong: The woman lives next door is a doctor. When the subject of a relative clause is the pronomialized element, it cannot be omitted. The
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Excellent. Or: I have two brothers, of whom one is a doctor. Your sentence is probably preferable.
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1. It was dark outside, and when we turned the street corner, it had become light.
2. sentence is fine but context might be needed. You might say "how can," or "how do."
3. correct; two possible meanings
4. She looks
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