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Either is possible. One word is a noun that indicates the individual ( My friends are all Buddhists ) and the other is an adjective that indicates their religion ( My friends are all Buddhist ). PS: See how easy it is to write inoffensive sample
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Thanks, Bender.
First of all, let me post the following grammar explanaiton about 'determiner':
"Determiners
GRAMMAR
A determiner is a word used in front of a noun to indicate whether you are referring to a specific
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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niue
19 days ago
Articles, Possessives, Nouns, Definite Articles, Determiners, Adjectives, United States, Speaking, Chat, American, Friendships
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Adj after noun:
But in your first three sentences, the ‘–ing words’ are verbs, not ‘participles as adjectives’. Just because they are participle in form says nothing about their syntactic function. For a participle to be adjectival it needs
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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billj
34 days ago
Clauses, Nouns, Pronouns, Adverbs, Noun Phrases, Relative Pronouns, Direct Objects, Adjectives, Writing, Sentences, Phrases, Speaking, Chat, Friendships
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@Liveinjapan: We're really digressing from your original question, so you may want to ignore this. Hi Toms, These are some great examples! "One moment please" is correct as part of a dialog. It does not stand alone since it is a
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Greetings, dear friends, there are several facts relating to this matter that can be unambiguously stated a priori. One of them concerns the definition of a lexico-grammatical class of the word 'unlike' (i.e. its word class/part-of-speech
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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gleb_chebrikoff
36 days ago
Prepositions, Clauses, Nouns, Negatives, Auxiliaries, Noun Phrases, Adjectives, Relationships, Writing, Sentences, Phrases, Friendships, Salutations, Friends, Negations
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Strictly speaking, I suppose you could call which a relative adjective or relative determiner in these sentences, but the usual terminology is 'relative pronoun' anyway.
It is not at all usual to place the preposition at the end in
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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english 1b3
52 days ago
Articles, Prepositions, Nouns, Pronouns, Commas, Relative Pronouns, Punctuation, Determiners, Adjectives, Sentences, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Apologies, Demonstrative
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My apprehension about this dissipated after the first 10 minutes, by which point I knew that I was in great hands.
The man they called John died in 2009, at which time I was in Africa. Strictly speaking, I suppose you could call which a
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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califjim
52 days ago
Articles, Prepositions, Nouns, Pronouns, Relative Pronouns, Determiners, Adjectives, Sentences, Speaking, Chat, Friendships
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'Low life' ought to have a hyphen between the words as it is being used as a substantive adjective (an adjective without the noun it is intended to qualify), i.e., you are really saying you're a low-life person. I assume the sense of
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"Frenzy" is a noun, not an adjective. You could use "frantic", but it doesn't really fit...
How about "I let myself go", or "I pulled all the stops"?
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(1) The word 'low life' ought to have a hyphen in it as you are using it as a substantive adjective (an adjective without the noun it qualifies), i.e., you are really saying, you're a low-life person . I assume the sense of the
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