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This letter stated that your unreasonable behaviour to include d : 1. Doing personal jobs without informing your department al head . 2. Inability to understnad understand the tasks given by the department concerned. 3. Lack of co-operation when
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The tortoise accepted the hare's challenge. Yes, that's the usual way of saying this. The tortoise accepted the challenge of the hare. Possible, and not ungrammatical, but unusual.
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Yes, you could say either of those. You could also say (and I probably would): The hare challenged the tortoise to a race.
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Hi, If you like my video , c heck out my the other videos on my account. By the way, on my account looks a bit odd here, but as we don't know what account refers to (a price-list, a web-page?), I've left it as it is. Do I have any grammars
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Hi, Hope you ar e well. Also , I just wonder that if are we a re still ok to meet up on Friday in Weybridge ? If the plan i s still on , please let me know the time and place . See you soon .
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Hi Peaceblinkfriend, Well, on the mean streets of London, we pronounce the final s as a z (a letter which we call zed , but Americans call zee ), and I guess that's pretty universal in the English-speaking world..
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Hi, I'd probably write: At the referrals of my brothers , Dave and Sam , who m both work at the same place, etc.. The first comma there is optional, but I'd always use the second....
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Hi, In answer to your first question, yes, you could omit 'by now' (although most native-speakers wouldn't). However, you would probably compensate for its absence, in spoken English, by stressing the words 'should' and/or
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Hi Shely, If the noun is singular, as with 'Poland' here, you should say: Poland 's entrance to the EU. You use s' if the noun is plural. For example: The local farmer s' wives always organise a festival at this time of year.
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Hi flamen000, As you may know, "Last Will and Testament", is used in English-speaking culture to describe what a person wishes to happen after they have died (it's usually all about their possessions, but a "Last Will and
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