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I would recommend looking at it this way: The word "married" is an adjective in your sentence, not a verb. In the following sentences, "You are" is followed by an adjective: You are married. You are single. You are
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Hi,
Let me first point out that in an English test, the second sentence will be marked as incorrect because it does not start with a capital letter. It's important.
could anybody tell me which sentence is correct?
great
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
clive
192 days ago
Capital Letters, Tenses, Word Order, Writing, Sentences, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Languages
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Hi Eddie Your exercise would be easier to do (and would probably also make more sense to you) if you knew who had actually asked the question. As Avangi mentioned, if you don't know that, you will have to invent something. When you report a
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He sat happily. Not He sat happy. By the way, your word order is highly inverted. That's not wrong in itself, but you might be interested to know the more usual phrasing. He sat happily with a cartoon book for hours. And you might also like to
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Hi, The Present Continuous tense (singular) is like this. I am drinking. You are drinking. He/she/it is drinking. Questions just involve a different word order. Best wishes, Clive
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Hi all! I've been giving English conversation lessons to a theology professor for about a year now. He's getting on in the years - a couple years from retirement - and his primary goal has been just to get his spoken English going a little
Teaching English (TEFL)
by
mikesusangray
1 yr 98 days ago
Conversations, Grammar, Pronunciation, Vocabulary, Articles, Universities, Idioms, Tenses, Present Tenses, Word Order, Prepositions, Present Simple, Definite Articles, Indefinite Articles
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As a native English speaker (well perhaps not entirely native, I was born in Russia and immigrated to the U.S. at the tender age of 7) I would have to say that apart from the obviously difficult aspects of the English language such as tenses, an
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My take:
1. A:I´m thankful for your help. I hope you will be teaching/ you are going to teach/ you will him also the next year. --- All of them seem possible to me.
B:I´m afraid I won´t be teaching him/ I´m not going to teach him,
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Hi Hoa Thai There were a number of details that I considered in my last post. These included the following: - Sold out used strictly as a verb vs sold out used like an adjective - Verb tense - Using sold vs sold out (particularly in combination
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Hi there. I think that your first publication is very very good. Where are you from? Where do you want to publish it? But some things seems suspicious, i meant using tenses and grammatical constructions.
Do You know what? - use do is necessary,
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