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In the first clause, "the two courses" is the subject > have (plural)
In the second clause, "which" is the subject, and it's sing. neutral, because it replaces the whole preceding clause.
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Looks like a kerby's a special kind of cucumber...
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Anonymous wrote:
I’m too busy / many times, repeatedly / do it now! / enjoy myself / late or overdue
do something unnecessary / experience difficulty / a scheduled time /
business comes first / be not busy / inconvenience / expired or
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I'd rather use a conditional "what sort of man would you go for if you wanted ...", but it may be a personal taste
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I find your proposition correct too... Here, "while" more or less means "when", so your sentence could mean "when/every time you smiles"; the simple past refers to the complete, finite action of smiling.
If you use the progressive form, it's as
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He quickly left the room, unnoticed, because nobody was looking at him
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I'd rather use "if you are among them", "if you are one of them", or perhaps, but I'm not sure "if you are such a person"
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Anonymous wrote:
User_gary wrote:
He walked along the streets downtown, looking at the boarded-up buildings.
Does the downtown mean "centre of the street"?
No, he walked along the streets in the city centre (or center , if
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They both /reached an orgasm/got off/ at the same time
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Yes, exactly!
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