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177 record(s) found in 0 seconds.
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The subordinate or relative clause could itsef be analysed this way:
relative pronoun+V+C of do+dO+iO
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Hello Castor,
I am not a teacher, but since there is no one is there to give it a try, I will tke the risk:
'The result will be crises for the government, which face huge increase in their spending on social security and healthcare.'
It's a
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Hello Calif Jim,
It seems that using 'perfect' and 'pluperfect' as tenses is based on using Latin Grammar as a model, but unlike Latin the verb does not get a separate ending, I don't know how to deal whit that, do you have any idea? Cheers
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Hello Antonia,
'skip a beat' means to get suddenly excited, or scared, it's up to you to draw the conclution.Cheers
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Thanks abbie, but it seems that it's more complicated than what it seems to be, within the confines of the same city you can have both, I have already abandoned the idea of finding out which is what. Cheers
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Hello just the truth,
Is it true that in American English, there is a tendency to use the past tense instead of the present perfective, for example:
'Did you go there.' instead of 'Have you gone there'
or 'you told me already' for 'You have
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Hello,
Innumerable force of Sprits arm'd
That drust dislike his reign and me prefering,
His utmost power with adverse power oppos'd
in dubious Battle on the plains of Heaven
(Paradise Lost, John Milton)
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Hello,
Blitzkrieg, noun, Germany, offensive operation making maximum use of firepower, manoeuvre warefare, and allarms cooperation: the enemy favour blitzkrieg tactics.
(Dic.of MILITARY TERMS second edition)
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Everything you can think of is true, dear paco.
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Glad to know it, LL.
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