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empressed ..I assume this is merely a typo, unless this a foreign spelling form for me? If the phrases were awkward, the rhythm repetitive, the style inconsistent, the material boring; it would have caught my attention, trust me Your use of the
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
eddie88
271 days ago
Regards, Numbers, Expressions, Punctuation, Whom, Spelling, Semicolons, Writing, Sentences, Animals, Students, Styles
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Thanks, I would definitly agree that the expressions 'I relish..." etc are not so appropriate. And yeah there seems little tying the paragraphs together. It seems like a whole lot of facts have been written as soon as they have been
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Hi, this is a cover letter to go with my C.V., which I wrote. What do you think of it? I want the cover letter to be simple, informative and straight to the point. I'd love to hear what you think. __ My name is X, and I believe I am the
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
eddie88
272 days ago
Prepositions, Numbers, Football, Cover Letter, Relationships, Writing, Business, Countries, Colours, Friendships, Careers, Friends, Sports, Letters, New Zealand
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As you reach for the car door, you feel... I have heard that the infinitive can exist without the 'to.' Is this correct? If so, is 'reach' in the above sentence an example of this. I would have thought this verb shows tense,
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I wish I could sing like them - Is like a preposition so the pronoun should be objective (as it is)? I wish I could sing like they - I assume you need to have the verb here.. I wish I could sing like they sing - 'like they sing' Is this a
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Edit; I have just read another list of subodinating conjunctions and 'now that' was included; this makes it an easy clause to identify, therefore. However, I'm sure I have a come across sentences in which a subordinating conjunction is
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"I have a fear of his getting angry." This is what I was suggesting: I asked why him (a pronoun) couldn't be the object of the preposition (not clause), and that 'getting angry' was a participle phrase modifying him, rather
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Yes, I would agree with the use of myself. "What's stopping the pronoun's being the object of the clause?", OR "What's stopping the pronoun from being the object of the clause?" I must take issue with the word
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Here is another similar question: I paid for Dave and myself I paid for Dave and me. Which one is correct? I realise that 'myself' is a reflexive pronoun, which always has to refer back to the antecedent. However, although it the reflexive
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What's stopping the pronoun being the object of the clause. I don't know what I was meaning here, to be honest. I must have been meaning the object of the preposition. As an aside, I think it should be either "What's stopping the
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