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243 record(s) found in 0 seconds.
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Jackson6612 wrote:
Second Question:
Is this sentence correct?
If both above sentences have been correctly punctuated then is there still any choice for a third one?
Here are my two cents:
If both of the above are correct, are
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Nona The Brit wrote: Just a one-off for fun (charity fundraising thing). It was brilliant, we had a day's training and then jumped the next day. I'd love to take it up as a hobby but can't afford it right now...
Thanks, I got it. By the
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Liveinjapan wrote:
" I had never feelings for her until the moment when our hands touched. Then, strangely, I started noticing her."
The order of wording in bold sounds odd to me; my two cents are as follows:
" I never had
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Nona The Brit wrote: That is indeed me and I am jumping out of an aeroplane with a parachute on my back.
Wow! That's awesome, so are you from the air force or just doing some parachuting for fun?
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Since this thread is all about Nona, I think I'm entitled to ask the following questions:
1. Is that you, Nona, that looks like a superlady wearing a helmet in the tiny photo under the alias " Nona the brit" ?
2. What's occasion of the
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Thanks, Nona, for the correction and clarification. It's crystal clear.
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Nona The Brit wrote:
it doesn't really contrast against caution very satisfactorily (and surely the listeners are tolerant, not the speaker).
I'd use 'confidence' against 'caution'.
Thanks, Nona, for the comment again, but the
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Nona The Brit wrote: leniency doesn't make much sense here.
Thanks, Nona, for the comment.
What if the word leniency is replaced with tolerance and some changes are made?
It is better to err on the side of tolerance than that of
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It is better to err on the side of leniency than that of caution when practincing speaking a new tongue.
Does this sentence make sense to you? Is it correct?
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Inchoateknowledge wrote:
do we drop the '-s' inflection in conditional mood? NO
quod erat demonstrandum
Mind you: it's a poem we're addressing, and it owns poetic liscense.
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Who sings a certain song
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