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The general rule I've always heard is that you use "ier" or "er" if the adjective is a one-syllable word, and you use "more" if it's a two-syllable word....and it wouldn't be English if there weren't exceptions, even if they're imposed by people
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!" or "It is an excellent report!"
Does that help?
-Haoqide
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Do you want us to check the grammar only, or do you want help in wording the paragraphs better?
-Haoqide
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I'm not sure I understand what you're trying to communicate with this. Can you give us more information as far as the context?
Thanks.
-Haoqide
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tree or something.
Does that help any?
-Haoqide
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Shouldn't it be "It, its, them"? The plural of "it" is "them". For example, "Where are my keys? I can't find them."
You probably knew that and just weren't thinking, though...happens to me ALL the time!
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Ouch...now that I look at it...you're right! OOPS!!!!! "You know who" IS a shortened form of "you know who did it".
Man, maybe I shouldn't be posting here...ouch.
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hehe, yep! It sounds really weird.
You're going to run into a lot of sitations at some point where you don't know which one to choose, even if you seperate the sentence into its clauses. Those will be the fun ones! If you want to speak the
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want to go, but you have to go because there are things you need to buy.
Does that help?
-Haoqide
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Hey, Pastel!
The correct grammar for that sentence would be, "You know whom, but you don't know why."
The reason "whom" is correct is that it's the object of the first clause in the sentence. The best way that I can think of to decide
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