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Asked on June 12, 2021 in Grammar.
“Emphasizing” is not an adverb, per se, but instead the start of an adverbial phrase that modifies the verb “draw.” The entire phrase “emphasizing the mouth” is what is the adverb, and it is because it modifies the verb “draw. In
learning english grammar, an adverb is used that started with “ing” or “o” but didn’t end.
So we can use the phrase. And go…I have learned English grammar successfully, for some time now. , present participles) When describing an action done by or an event caused by the same subject in the main clause.
https://learningEnglishgrammar.wordpress.com/. In
your sentence, “emphasizing the mouth” is describing how the subject, “Americans,” performs the verb, “draw.” “”It’s
hard to beat this idea in all your eyes, “At the same time we are having this conversation.”
- 499609 views
- 393 answers
- 184556 votes
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Asked on June 12, 2021 in Grammar.
“Emphasizing” is not an adverb, per se, but instead the start of an adverbial phrase that modifies the verb “draw.” The entire phrase “emphasizing the mouth” is what is the adverb, and it is because it modifies the verb “draw. In
learning english grammar, an adverb is used that started with “ing” or “o” but didn’t end.
So we can use the phrase. And go…I have learned English grammar successfully, for some time now. , present participles) When describing an action done by or an event caused by the same subject in the main clause.
https://learningEnglishgrammar.wordpress.com/. In
your sentence, “emphasizing the mouth” is describing how the subject, “Americans,” performs the verb, “draw.” “”It’s
hard to beat this idea in all your eyes, “At the same time we are having this conversation.”
- 499609 views
- 393 answers
- 184556 votes
-
Asked on June 8, 2021 in Grammar.
“Emphasizing” is not an adverb, per se, but instead the start of an adverbial phrase that modifies the verb “draw.” The entire phrase “emphasizing the mouth” is what is the adverb, and it is because it modifies the verb “draw. In
learning english grammar, an adverb is used that started with “ing” or “o” but didn’t end.
So we can use the phrase. And go…I have learned English grammar successfully, for some time now. , present participles) When describing an action done by or an event caused by the same subject in the main clause.
https://learningEnglishgrammar.wordpress.com/. In
your sentence, “emphasizing the mouth” is describing how the subject, “Americans,” performs the verb, “draw.” “”It’s
hard to beat this idea in all your eyes, “At the same time we are having this conversation.”
- 499609 views
- 393 answers
- 184556 votes
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Asked on March 27, 2021 in Synonyms.
I very rarely hear “in this case” (except by foreigners – it seems a common mistake). What use is there to point out the case as a normal case? What should I say if my company took on any kind of action and was getting a response from my friend, but the company wasn’t doing any kind of action? Why would you make them look at the first graphic you posted, and say “so, in this case, we will make a graphic on Flipchart so that they can be confused.” Are there too many people present at a meeting without the flip chart if people did ‘like’ the other table in the conference?
(Some feel English is very dialect-specific to me, so don’t assume this is true for everyone – this is what makes sense in my head as a British English speaker.)
- 801949 views
- 3 answers
- 295896 votes
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Asked on March 15, 2021 in Grammar.
At the best there might be one of those that you might possibly grammatically include would be “that,” but only if preceded by a comma,
a dash or a consonant as follows. That these skills are transferable across professions, that makes them particularly beneficial to twenty-first century students.
If
they develop these skills to a job in 10 years or 20 years and are transferred across professions, that makes them especially beneficial for twenty-first century students.
How do a dash before “that” make it a left dislocation in which the additional pronoun “that” is defined to the left of the clause in which it appears.
If I know only two words, I would only have the one, which would make the sentence ungrammatical. Should I use that particular word? What are the most important skills that are transferable across
multiple disciplines? ”
If I believe the crux of the problem you’re having is you aren’t seeing the that-clause (i.e., not seeing any of the quotes). , that these skills are transferable across professions”) is a noun and the subject of the verb “makes. ” Maybe you don’t think that clauses are nouns (or, more specifically, noun clauses), but they can be. ” The following link is for more complete explanation with examples: https://www.englishgrammar.com
Weblog
(associates): www.www.thatclause-noun _______________/org/thatclause-noun/
- 891824 views
- 2 answers
- 331173 votes
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Asked on March 6, 2021 in Other.
How sometimes can I
- fall asleep completely, my belly full and my bed warm?
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When the newlyweds arrived at the motel, they checked in, unaware of their problems.
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Jack and John strip off their shirts and swim towards the lake, the happiest they’ve ever been.
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Aware of time was about up, I made a wild guess and hoped I was right.
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Dressed to the nines, she walked gracefully into the room.
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On her feet she humped his hat in hand and crossed the room.
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She stepped gracefully into the room, neck-deep in grief but head held high. Then she was hers.
You made an example that doesn’t have an absolute ” phrase. What did you do? Second is that for a phrase, by definition, there are more than one word. If it is true there will be more word in it. We speak with one word. “Gracefully”. When an absolute phrase changes the entire sentence (i.e. the whole sentence) – it will make sense. Since you say that she “gracefully walked into the room” is the sentence and don’t mention that you’re changing the meaning of the sentence but are merely moving “gracefully” to the end, it’s clear that “gracefully” is only modifying “walked” because that’s all it modifies in “She gracefully walked into the room” ” It is not modifying the entire sentence but still just the verb. The only difference is there when it appears after the indirect object rather than before the verb.
(subject) “An absolute phrase is a group
of words that modifies an independent clause as a whole. ” http://www.thoughtco.de. ( https://www.thoughtco.de/) ( ( https://www.thoughtco.de/html/html) An absolute
phrase is a grammatically independent group of words that serves to modify or add information to an entire sentence. ” ( https://www.Thefreedictionary.com/Absolute-Phrases.html) Absolute Phrases.
Definition: a group of words consisting of a noun and a participle, that is attached to a sentence without a conjunction in order to modify it ( https://prezi.org/. htm ). com/fd85xqfskwaw/absolute-phrase/ )
) is a high-quality video that we should not miss (but we should be aware and have a high quality video).
- 1063323 views
- 2 answers
- 399162 votes
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Asked on March 1, 2021 in Other.
Is there a Latin word’littera’ which means “letter” or “literature”. Is it really there? If this does not satisfy, teach your child the word “missive” and be done with it.
- 1239078 views
- 3 answers
- 427325 votes
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Asked on February 27, 2021 in Single word requests.
How many words do come to mind? In a more grammatical way, the verb would be “front” or — be two-faced. ”
” Is there a way to improve a product?
- 1257039 views
- 12 answers
- 430316 votes