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They won't smoke ever since they saw a film on lung cancer. What does "won't" mean here?
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ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
teo
1 yr 266 days ago
Simple Present, American English, Verbs, Constructions, Tenses, Clauses, Adverbs, Stative Verbs, Present Tenses, Expressions, Present Perfect, Idioms, Images
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http://forums.eslcafe.com/student/viewtopic.php?t=22113&highlight =
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ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
teo
1 yr 266 days ago
Simple Present, American English, Verbs, Constructions, Tenses, Clauses, Adverbs, Stative Verbs, Present Tenses, Expressions, Present Perfect, Idioms, Images
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I have some questions about the homework i was giving. Can you please tell me if i am doing these right. if i am not please tell me what i am doing wrong. A. Identifying the Parts of Speech in Sentences Identify the part of speech of each bold
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I can't find a source that explains what I thought I understood many years ago. The question deals with joining an adverb and an adjective with a hyphen before the noun, but not afterward:
the freshly-cut lawn smells great ~ the lawn is freshly
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Conchita57 wrote: According to Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary, 'wade' is also American English for 'paddle': paddle (WALK) UK verb (US wade) to walk with bare feet through shallow water, often at the edge of the sea: We rolled up our
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According to Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary, 'wade' is also American English for 'paddle': paddle (WALK) UK verb (US wade) to walk with bare feet through shallow water, often at the edge of the sea: We rolled up our trousers and
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This should clear your doubts:
adjunct noun FORMAL In grammar, an adjunct is an adverb or adverbial phrase that gives extra information in a sentence. (from Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary )
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I go there twice a week. Here I thought `twice' was a adverb. Now, someone told, it is a `adjunct'. So I am being confused. Is the `adjunct' and `adverbs' are one and the same?
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------------ NOUN: Abbr. NbE The direction or point on the mariner's compass halfway between due north and north-northeast, or 11°15 east of due north. ADVERB: & ADJECTIVE:
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Looks like bad English to me. It's open to interpretation. If that were the case, the language would have almost no good words at all, Anon. Not slang, but informal, Rex. It dates, the dictionaries say, from about 1965 or so: Up-front. Informal.
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