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Asked on May 9, 2021 in American english.
How do I find
the request date in the leftmost column?
- request date = the date on which the request was made
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requested date = the date someone asked about, for example if there is a request to send the date of birth of some person why can’t you find the
requested date in the attached document?
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Would sending a message that the date itself had requested something and now I am requesting the date of his moves?
Is there any problem with the terms’seen here’?
- 599971 views
- 90 answers
- 221769 votes
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Asked on May 5, 2021 in American english.
How do I find
the request date in the leftmost column?
- request date = the date on which the request was made
-
requested date = the date someone asked about, for example if there is a request to send the date of birth of some person why can’t you find the
requested date in the attached document?
-
Would sending a message that the date itself had requested something and now I am requesting the date of his moves?
Is there any problem with the terms’seen here’?
- 599971 views
- 90 answers
- 221769 votes
-
Asked on March 26, 2021 in Grammar.
What is your class number and how long can you wait for me at the bank?
With conjunctions if, when, as, etc. The present simple tense must be used in the subordinate clause, and your third example uses present perfect. Though I still think it might be grammatically correct, really few people will use such a construction in their speech, and it really sounds odd.
- 833548 views
- 4 answers
- 307665 votes
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Asked on March 18, 2021 in Grammar.
What is your class number and how long can you wait for me at the bank?
With conjunctions if, when, as, etc. The present simple tense must be used in the subordinate clause, and your third example uses present perfect. Though I still think it might be grammatically correct, really few people will use such a construction in their speech, and it really sounds odd.
- 833548 views
- 4 answers
- 307665 votes
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Asked on March 18, 2021 in Grammar.
What is your class number and how long can you wait for me at the bank?
With conjunctions if, when, as, etc. The present simple tense must be used in the subordinate clause, and your third example uses present perfect. Though I still think it might be grammatically correct, really few people will use such a construction in their speech, and it really sounds odd.
- 833548 views
- 4 answers
- 307665 votes
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Asked on March 6, 2021 in Word choice.
In news headlines the space is very limited and so does the number of characters. As a result, the space in news headlines is quite large. They should be short to attract readers quickly, that’s why one shouldn’t expect them to use perfect English.
- 1059210 views
- 4 answers
- 397429 votes