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Hi Vincent, (a) is wrong. You probably meant to say 'he likes to watch drama series'. (b) is alright, although I don't think you would hear that sentence very often. Cheers, NP Oh, Philip beat me to it ;)
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To me, "they were there" seems to refer simply to the fact that the husbands had not left their wives, as opposed to the man discussed in the next sentence.
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Philip wrote: NewPhilologist wrote: In this context, I think it makes a bit more sense to think of the "shipping address" as "the address of the recipient of the letter". Most envelopes have
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In this context, I think it makes a bit more sense to think of the "shipping address" as "the address of the recipient of the letter". Most envelopes have two addresses on them: the addressee's and the sender's. The postal services will of course
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The Oxford English Dictionary says the following about the etymology of the word "caucus": Arose in New England: origin obscure.
Alleged to have been used in Boston U.S. before 1724; quotations go back to 1763. Already in 1774 Gordon ( Hist.
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Sounds good to me
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It sounds to me like the second speaker will be seeing how Jennifer is doing when he gets back to the police station where both speakers work. Obviously, I don't know whether the context allows this interpretation, but that's the first thing that
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I'd use "more bandwidth" in this context.
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You're quite likely to hear some native speakers say that, but especially in writing, stick with the possessive my instead of me.
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You can definitely use "do" in this sentence. Of course, whether you use "do" or "did" changes the meaning, as has already been pointed out.
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