You searched for the word(s): user:Bennyman (22 record(s) found in 0.66s.)
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Hello and welcome to this topic. I was wondering if anyone of you able and competent English speakers could be so kind as to correct my English, and find any grammatical irregularities or odd phrasings.
Thanks beforehand,
Ben
Many women get in a good mood when they go out for...
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Yeah, my teacher is wrong. She marked it as a mistake and told me to use "inhuman" next time.
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My teacher said it was a mistake to use "inhumane conditions" when talking about Africans being shipped from Africa to America, but I couldn't figure out why I had to use "inhuman conditions" in this case.
http://www.allwords.com/word-inhuman,%20inhumane.html
I found this little bit about...
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I don't really get the difference between using inhuman or inhumane.
inhumane:not compassionate: lacking compassion and causing excessive suffering
inhuman:
1.
very cruel: showing great cruelty and a lack of humanity
2.
unfeeling: giving an impression of being...
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Hello and welcome to my thread.
My English teacher has corrected a translation of mine, and while I don't doubt her abilities, I would like a second opinion.
The questions are as follows:
"A lot of progress was made" which one is better?
Thanks beforehand,
Ben.
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"I'm taking my half day leave from 1:30pm onwards on Friday, 23 Feb 2007, to take my sister-in-law to the airport ."
You always hyphenate words like brother-in-law, sister-in-law, mother-in-law, etcetera. Hyphenated words are considered as one word and you are describing a family member....
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Aleen wrote Bennyman wrote Birisi wrote there is a tragedy everday so much people killed by Israel s army it is a crime against humanity so much family destroyed Gazze bombed by Israel and innocent
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I am not a native English speaker, but I am sure we could both teach each other something. Oh, and I don't live anywhere near Buenos Aires-- I live in Copenhagen. However, we could still chat over MSN. I am very interested in learning some Spanish since I am going to study it for three years in...
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Liveinjapan wrote:
Thanks, Grammar Geek!
So, used a comma splice, that would be okay:
'Fortunately we had a map,(<-- a comma splice) without it we would have gotten (/ been) lost.
Is that what you mean?
I understand what you said about how to separate the sentence into complete two...
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