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You need periods or, as appropriate, question marks at the end of all your sentences. The word "I" is always capitalised. Do not imagine that capitalisation and punctuation are unimportant. If you care at all about writing properly then
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These are the meanings that come first to my mind. There may be others.
"here" means where the speaker is located. "there" means some place away from where the speaker is located.
"out" can mean outside a
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Don't know that I have a "very well trained ear", but I also hear "lonely".
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I chose "D". It was wrong. They said "A" was the correct answer.
I agree with Ferdis. The correct answer is D.
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Can you give us some examples of what you said above?
"Is it true they would have killed him?"
"I would have come, but I was too busy."
"In a properly designed product this would never happen."
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Please, can you check my post about something similar to this problem? It's a conditional with the "would" + present perfect in the IF-clause, where we are to use past perfect.
I commented at the other thread:
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
mr wordy
112 days ago
American English, Present Tenses, Past Perfect, Present Perfect, Past Tenses, Conditionals, Countries, United States, United Kingdom, Great Britain, American, Languages
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" If I would have known ..." sounds plain wrong to me. I'm a British English speaker, and I'm not sure about American English usage here, but I'm guessing that in all forms of English this is inferior to "If I had
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My guess is that it means "chicken out" (i.e. not have the courage to do something), but I'm not 100% sure.
"oot" means "out", but you probably know that.
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It seems longer than it needs to be. How about this:
All staff please note:
Some users have mentioned that they find Outlook email alerts distracting. If you want to turn them off, follow the instructions at Solution No. 1 in the
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You can use "would" when describing hypothetical or uncertain situations even if (as here) there is no explicit "if" statement.
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