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314 record(s) found in 0 seconds.
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No, I wouldn't say it does.
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This is the definition that applies here: Foundation 2 an
organization that has been established in order to provide money for a
particular group of people in need of help or for a particular type of
study: the British Heart Foundation the
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Yes, that's what I understand too -- correct or satisfactory answers.
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Both 'I'm in class now' and 'I'm in my class now' are common ways of saying it. Note: 'I'm in the classroom now' -- Here you need the definite article. Saying that you are in the classroom doesn't necessarily mean that you are in class (or having
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Clive wrote:
Finally, I'd say ' the mother . . . her daughter' rather than 'her mother . . . her daughter'. Saying 'her mother... her daughter' suggests a grandmother and her granddaughter, don't you think?
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Spectacled-Girl wrote: Conchita57 wrote: It seems to be a play on words on 'solar/sun' and 'shine'. What was probably meant is that solar energy takes on a new form (in Singapore).
Oh, I
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Spectacled-Girl wrote: Conchita57 wrote: The correct sentence is 'pick me up', since the pronoun has to be placed between the verb and the preposition.
I just want to confirm
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Wendel wrote: If u change me to it.. There are both correct.. "It" belong to "adverb" 'It' is a pronoun and therefore cannot be placed after the preposition in this case.
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It seems to be a play on words on 'solar/sun' and 'shine'. What was probably meant is that solar energy takes on a new form (in Singapore).
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The correct sentence is 'pick me up', since the pronoun has to be placed between the verb and the preposition.
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