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Both positions are correct. You can put completely adverb after the subject (you) or at the end of the sentence. CB
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when i I need to say "she" i I say "he" having slip of tongue, do es this ever happen to even to native speakers?? No. Very rarely, if ever. instead "tell me when he is leaving" i I may say "tell me when is he
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1. Both options are fine, but it depends on the content - "we completely understand the situation ..." - "we understand the situation completely..." - there should be an object ("situation") between the verb and the
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Jaleel.nt, in the first instance, we deal with a phenomenon that is conventionally known as a passive gerund ; the whole clause with being... can be substituted with a noun phrase, eg, ...this award . Therefore, we refer to being... as a nominal
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
gleb_chebrikoff
47 days ago
Prepositions, Constructions, Clauses, Nouns, Word Order, Noun Phrases, Gerunds, Commas, Punctuation, Nominative, Marriage, Relationships, Writing, Sentences, Phrases
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Hi, Avangi,
Many thanks for your further explanation. I guess I know how to express myself much better now.
Is she often late for school?
Yes, she is often late for school. (Long answer)
=> Yes, she is (often late for
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
ihsuan
54 days ago
Regards, Verbs, Adverbs, Word Order, Universities, Helping Verbs, Sentences, Online, Websites, Students, Schools, Apologies, Negations
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HI,
Tom, who is a brute, punches Mrs. Wilson in the face.
In this sentence, it's an adjective clause, because it describes the noun 'Tom'.
But consider this examples.
I know a fact . 'A fact' is a noun.
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Sentence (1)'s word order makes it a question. To make it a statement, say "...their possibilities are ruined."
Sentence(2) needs a noun: "The most interesting thing..." , or you could start the sentence, "What is
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Off-topic side note: with German (and Dutch) word ordering the problem does not occur because a verb phrase is split into two separate parts. For example, using a Dutch/German word order (V2) this sentence becomes something like, "The
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This sounds like German word order.
Off-topic side note: with German (and Dutch) word ordering the problem does not occur because a verb phrase is split into two separate parts. For example, using a Dutch/German word order (V2) this
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With the computer the weaker pupils can avoid more easily confrontation with their teacher. This sounds like German word order. English does not place adverbs between the verb and its object unless there are so many words in that portion of the
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