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Question
Leaders like JFK and Martin Luther King have made important contributions to the people of the United States. Name another world leader you think is important. Give specific reasons for your choice.
An Important Leader
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ESL Essay, Writing World
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julielai
217 days ago
Essays, Paragraphs, Spelling, Tenses, Whom, British People, Writing, Countries, United States, Great Britain, Numbers
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"with." Would you mind explaining that again? I get: for evil ... alone gives 24,000,000. Something changes in its estimation formula there. I will try to elucidate. To replicate my search type the following words in the search field.
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I stopped reading Katherine Kerr when the same mistake was perpetuated in her 3rd or 4th book: she gave 'thin' ... of an o - I like to call it a smiley - so %u means a smiley over the u. That diacritic is called a "breve" in
alt.usage.english
by
raymond s. wise
5 yr 245 days ago
Vowels, American English, Spelling, Pronunciation, Whom, Diphthongs, Mistakes, Relationships, Friendships, United States, American, Speaking, Writing, Friends
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This is from a book by Molly Gloss of Portland, Oregon regarding the Esperanto used in her SF novel. Because ... as it is spelled. Vowels are sounded ah, eh, ee, oh, oo - as in "Are there three or two?" This comes pretty close. Others
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I stopped reading Katherine Kerr when the same mistake was perpetuated in her 3rd or 4th book: she gave 'thin' as an example of voiced 'th'. This is from a book by Molly Gloss of Portland, Oregon regarding the Esperanto used in her
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Michael West redled: Furthermore, Australian English is very different from the language accepted ... know who compiled the dictionaries, but it wasn't an Australian. I've noticed that too, and I'm not even Australian. Not helpfully,
alt.usage.english
by
peter moylan
5 yr 271 days ago
Spelling, Whom, British English, Mistakes, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, United States, American, Writing, Australia, Languages, Numbers
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It is? Would any Americans here say "July nineteen"? I wouldn't; I think it sounds odd. -Aaron J. Dinkin Dr. Whom Writing "July 19" is commonplace; saying "July 19th" is also commonplace. It seems some younger
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( . . . ) Anyway, it's a mistake to ask people to respond without ... unknown until someone does a properly designed and executed survey. Do lexicographers do "properly designed and executed surveys"? I didn't say and I
alt.usage.english
by
bob cunningham
6 yr 82 days ago
Spelling, Whom, Nouns, Marriage, Mistakes, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Relationships, United States, American, Usages, Writing, Languages, Apologies
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Dear Professor Spira I'm confident the most usual spelling is ... '-ant' even if it is, at present, a minority usage. Anyway, it's a mistake to ask people to respond without looking at a dictionary because you want the most usual
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