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I wanna say I had coffeemaking traineeship few years ago. (not now)
Then, which one is correct to write between 'be in training' and 'well-trained'?
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Hi there! As I'm preparing for the CAE examination, I pretty much have to be careful with my writing style. The problem is, I seldom write any articles of reports in English, so I'm not sure if the way I write them is correct or not, because,
Essay, Report & Composition Writing
by
cyberduck
32 days ago
Grammar, Spelling, Articles, Writing, Mistakes, Qualifications, Correcting, Colours, Styles, Languages, CEA, Accreditation, Numbers, CAE
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MicrosoftInternetExplorer4
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This is old, beautiful English that is used today only in poetry and by certain religious groups. Those forms were used for singular "you." Thou art a good student. = You (singular) are a good student; With this ring, I do thee wed. = I
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I am a Native Romanian Translator with 35 years experience in the translation business. Over the years I became: - a Literary Translator with books published (FIction, Non-Fiction and Science Fiction) - a Technical Translator (certification) - a
Chat, Make Friends, Meet Friendly People
by
nina_iordache
32 days ago
Resume, Curriculum Vitae, Translation, Languages, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Careers, Business, Qualifications, Writing, Degree, Proofreading, Resumes
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Hi there,
I’ve made a statement of my professional profile; I want to know if grammatically this is fine.
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Electronic’s engineer from the University of Quindío with a specialization in project management of telecommunication
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Hello,
How can we combine two sentences with a relative pronoun clause?
Await him
We don't know who he is
Something like " Await him who we don't know who he is"?
Thanks for help.
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The reason for reading is to relate what you happen to be reading with what you already know. In this sense, if you do not know anything about what you are reading, it is like trying to grab a handful of air... a wasted effort. Take these digits,
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Just guessing, disestablishmentarian. They like to torure kids at spelling contests with it.
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"If you knew what I had gone through, you would surely pity me."
Don't listen to these people. You can change it to "have" because only the first verb has to be in the subjunctive mood. The verb "knew" is
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
anonymous
33 days ago
Tenses, Clauses, Simple Past, Subjunctives, Past Tenses, Conditionals, Writing, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Simple Tenses, Languages
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