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Asked on March 1, 2021 in Other.
Both answers are grammatically correct. The second one is a little sloppy. What is its meaning depends on what you’re saying: if it happened in the past, or if it’s likely to happen in the future, require different structures; I think Rimmer provided a good explanation on this part.
I dont understand the second question. Could you please advise me? “May” is a verb and such category usually requires them to follow another verb without the “to”, with the exception of “ought to” and “used to”. What do you see in these examples taken from the OLD. You
- may go home now.
- Find job. Who should I find?
- Is it good to quit smoking? Or at least not at all?
- I used to smoke but gave up two years ago. Do you smoke tobacco now?
What is the meaning of ‘Jobby & Billionaire’?
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Asked on February 27, 2021 in Other.
Robotics is a singular noun, although it’s a pseudonym. As such, it is treated as a plural noun.
Those terms are used in scientific terms like Linguistics, Statistics or Economics. See terms like Physics, Statistics, Psychology or Computer Science.
Why is the verb robot never a noun? Robotic can’t be interpreted as an adjective,
robotic don’t really become a
noun.
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