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I'm sorry, I wasn't aware of that association!
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To me, it means he made a trip away from home with his son.
I think you need a hyphen between outward and bound
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Your first sentence is correct.
If you write "to" instead of "for", I'd change the word order to "when does the last train to Brooklyn leave?"
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Are you able to see me? Is it possible for you to see me?
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I'd use the present perfect here...
Have you bought the tickets (yet)? Meaning: do you have the tickets?
There's no complement referring to the past, so I wouldn't use the simple past.
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Yesterday my boss told me that I could (?) move to another office in our firm.
I don't know whether this is a reward/promotion or a punishment.
I will be sitting by myself.
In the past / before I used to be sitting with other people.
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Tomer wrote: Hi, "As far as I know, someone threw some eggs towards the stage and it They landed on Tom's face Right after the incident occured Tom went off stage" Thanks TH
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I think we mostly use the passive when the subject is unknown or unimportant in the context, which is not the case here.
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Not in France, as far as I know...
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I guess you can, but the sentences look awkward to me... Why not simply say "she speaks English very well"?
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