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160 record(s) found in 0.01 seconds.
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Welcome to the forums, Mountain!
The word you're looking for is "Verbatim".
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Looks like one slipped by me. When I said "I and you are used as plural" I meant that though they are singular, like plural nouns they don't use the "s" ending. My mistake for not explaining in detail. Wrong wording on my part. My sentence
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You're welcome!
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1. "Worse" is the comparative of "bad" while "worst" is the superlative.
bad-worse-the worst
His new movie is worse than his last.
Your cooking is getting worse! (compared to before)
Among his movies, the newest one is the worst.
This is
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
teacher eric
4 yr 342 days ago
Articles, Grammar, Verbs, Dates, Constructions, Nouns, Numbers, Adverbs, British English, Universities, Quotation Marks, Prepositional Verbs, Prefixes, Hyphens
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1. Use a verb without an "s" if the subject is plural.
Many colleges offer scholarships.
I offer you my life. (I and you are used as plural)
2. Use a verb with an "s" if the subject is singular.
The hotel provides excellent service.
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What age is she?
What is her age?
How old is she?
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Depending on what you quantify, both are correct.
1. Use many and few for countable nouns.
I have many/few friends.
There are many more opportunities waiting for you.
2. Use much and little for uncountable nouns.
She has much/little
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I don't think a dictionary would work if you don't know what the thing is called in the first place.
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Both are wrong because neither is a sentence- both are fragments.
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1. Wrong- Change "doesn't" to "don't"
2. Wrong- Change "doesn't" to "don't" and "id" to "ID"
3. Wrong- Change "id" to "ID"
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