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45 record(s) found in 0 seconds.
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Hi Alia,
Here is what I would write:
Hi, (Start your greeting with a capital letter and end the line with a comma.)
I am Alia, (Your name is a proper noun, like England or Paris and should always be spelt with a capital letter.) I (The
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Yes, but it does not have the same meaning as 'to be or not to be'.
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There was a song, very popular many years ago, which said in part, 'Come fly with me'.
The way the sentence is structured, I would be happy slipping an 'and' in but not a 'to'.
'Will you come to the park and play with me.' is ok.
'Will you
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I think the first one is correct.
'Will you come and play with who?' 'Liz and me' would be objective in this case.:) No pun intended.
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HotWombat
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LEFT is the past and past participle of LEAVE
The sentence 'I left him go.' is incorrect. Your family member is incorrect in his assumption.
'I left him to it.' is what your family member should have said.
'I can't help you any more. I
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Spot on again, Maj.
I would write: 'I heard a little girl say that.' If you had heard her repeating it a number of times, 'saying' would have been correct.
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Sorry, Maj.
Maybe that is an Australian colloquialism. It means: correct; right.
She answered that question correctly.
Yes, she was spot on.
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'The woman, having heard about it....'
Firstly, a comma after woman and no capital for 'having'. This is obviously only part of a sentence. To answer your question, it is the woman who has heard.
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That's correct, Abdulla. Just remember that all days of the week are written with a capital letter.
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