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Hi Dantha
I'm not sure how to format strikethrough, so I'll format text to be deleted as italic and text to be added as bold .
This is to inform you that Mrs.XXX cousin Sister of mine , my sister's cousin,** bearing passport number ######
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Hi Johny
It's a good question, because English can be tricky in this case. When responding to a negative statement, or question phrased in a negative way, you can use either yes or no, as long as you clarify exactly what it is that you are
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As a native English speaker, I wouldn't detect any difference in the meanings of the two words.
I'll be interested to see if anyone or anybody else does.
Cheers
John.
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Sure.
Let me put it another way: "Perfect" in a grammatical sense means completed.
So:
I am eating (Present progressive - going on now)
I have eaten (Present perfect - completed as of now)
I had eaten (Past perfect - completed in the
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Depend why it's reopening. More details please.
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When means 'at which time'.
While means 'during which time' (when used in the temporal sense).
While therefore has a suggestion of ongoing action.
"While I was doing the dishes, I watched TV." (while in the process of doing dishes)
"When
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The first sentence is grammatically correct, but few people would speak in that way. "Did" is only needed for emphasis if (for instance) there were two things under discussion.
e.g.
Person A: "Only one thing surprised me about him, and it
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Past perfect is widely used in everyday speech. It allows the speaker or writer to indicate that of two things in the past, one was finished before the other.
"I ate at the Diner and I met Bill" = Two things happened - no indication of which
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You can. You just need another auxiliary verb to go with the progressive future tense:
"I will be swimming."
"I will be going to the pool tomorrow."
Cheers
John.
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Rollout is a noun.
Roll out is a verb and adverb.
"Roll out the red carpet."
"... complete the rollout."
Cheers
John.
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