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Clive, AlpheccaStars, thanks: Clive: You, however, got me confused on one account. You said: A native speaker would take sentence 1 to mean 'No-one has more experience than her'. Thus: 1. She has as much experience in teaching as
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Here is another question. It is on the comparative degree. This one bothers me a lot. The Sentence: 1. She has as much experience in teaching as anyone in this school. Question: With use of "as much ... as", could sentence 1 above means
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Thanks, CJ. What it boils down to, I guess, is whether you want to say: e. Which do you think of the two better, BHC or BaR? OR f. Which do you think of the two IS better, BHC or BaR? What you got? J
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I am in a big time confusion. I turn to your help once again. Situation: We will be on a date in the city next Saturday. We need to decide which new movie we should go to. We are down to two choices, "Burn after Reading" and
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Well said and excellent examples. I have no more questions on this topic. Anon, you are the man/woman, and I love you. Again, thanks a lot. J
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Once again, I would like to hear your opinions. This time, it is "," ... yes, a comma. (A) She married a guy whom she met on the internet. (B) She married a guy, whom she met on the internet. ... as you can see, the only difference
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Thank you. What you are saying is entirely correct and I concur it. However, when that formation is combined with the "not only ... but also ..." structure, I wondered if I could get away without saying "don't". Thus,
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A simple question: Can we say this? Hey, not only plan it but actually do it! Here are points: ... it is supposed to be a negative imperative form, which means you are ordering in negative sense as in "Don't follow me!" ... the
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Hi, I believe the respondent is responsbile for specifying which point he/she is saying "Yes" and "No" to in order to clarify what he/she means. Usually, the responder answers the "real question" that I am asking. eg
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Do you know whether Carol likes me or not? This question does not warrant a yes/no answer, and no native would give one unless they were being funny. A: Would you like Coca Cola or Pepsi? B: Yes please! Thanks. I do not think you got my question
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