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  • Asked on May 10, 2021 in Grammar.

    I remember talking in a foreign language (i.e. bribery) that was more common than in English. Is the original Elizabethan gospel copied? (This will make more sense in the book of James Version). What should I do if I know ye not that.? Is “Don’t you know.” wrong instead of “Don’t you know”? Is there an archaic form still used today? Can you give me feedback on my contraction but dont want to use the lumpy “he don’t know.”? “He doesn’t know” is off limits, so you say “He knows not to say anything.” What is the best poem or poetry to pen? Consider the famous example of someone picking peddles off a flower saying “She loves me, she loves me not” or “He loves me, he loves me not”. What

    is meaning of the same: “-“

    • 599739 views
    • 67 answers
    • 221095 votes
  • Asked on May 9, 2021 in Grammar.

    I remember talking in a foreign language (i.e. bribery) that was more common than in English. Is the original Elizabethan gospel copied? (This will make more sense in the book of James Version). What should I do if I know ye not that.? Is “Don’t you know.” wrong instead of “Don’t you know”? Is there an archaic form still used today? Can you give me feedback on my contraction but dont want to use the lumpy “he don’t know.”? “He doesn’t know” is off limits, so you say “He knows not to say anything.” What is the best poem or poetry to pen? Consider the famous example of someone picking peddles off a flower saying “She loves me, she loves me not” or “He loves me, he loves me not”. What

    is meaning of the same: “-“

    • 599739 views
    • 67 answers
    • 221095 votes
  • Asked on May 8, 2021 in Grammar.

    I remember talking in a foreign language (i.e. bribery) that was more common than in English. Is the original Elizabethan gospel copied? (This will make more sense in the book of James Version). What should I do if I know ye not that.? Is “Don’t you know.” wrong instead of “Don’t you know”? Is there an archaic form still used today? Can you give me feedback on my contraction but dont want to use the lumpy “he don’t know.”? “He doesn’t know” is off limits, so you say “He knows not to say anything.” What is the best poem or poetry to pen? Consider the famous example of someone picking peddles off a flower saying “She loves me, she loves me not” or “He loves me, he loves me not”. What

    is meaning of the same: “-“

    • 599739 views
    • 67 answers
    • 221095 votes
  • Asked on May 7, 2021 in Grammar.

    I remember talking in a foreign language (i.e. bribery) that was more common than in English. Is the original Elizabethan gospel copied? (This will make more sense in the book of James Version). What should I do if I know ye not that.? Is “Don’t you know.” wrong instead of “Don’t you know”? Is there an archaic form still used today? Can you give me feedback on my contraction but dont want to use the lumpy “he don’t know.”? “He doesn’t know” is off limits, so you say “He knows not to say anything.” What is the best poem or poetry to pen? Consider the famous example of someone picking peddles off a flower saying “She loves me, she loves me not” or “He loves me, he loves me not”. What

    is meaning of the same: “-“

    • 599739 views
    • 67 answers
    • 221095 votes
  • Asked on May 5, 2021 in Grammar.

    I remember talking in a foreign language (i.e. bribery) that was more common than in English. Is the original Elizabethan gospel copied? (This will make more sense in the book of James Version). What should I do if I know ye not that.? Is “Don’t you know.” wrong instead of “Don’t you know”? Is there an archaic form still used today? Can you give me feedback on my contraction but dont want to use the lumpy “he don’t know.”? “He doesn’t know” is off limits, so you say “He knows not to say anything.” What is the best poem or poetry to pen? Consider the famous example of someone picking peddles off a flower saying “She loves me, she loves me not” or “He loves me, he loves me not”. What

    is meaning of the same: “-“

    • 599739 views
    • 67 answers
    • 221095 votes
  • Asked on May 1, 2021 in Grammar.

    I remember talking in a foreign language (i.e. bribery) that was more common than in English. Is the original Elizabethan gospel copied? (This will make more sense in the book of James Version). What should I do if I know ye not that.? Is “Don’t you know.” wrong instead of “Don’t you know”? Is there an archaic form still used today? Can you give me feedback on my contraction but dont want to use the lumpy “he don’t know.”? “He doesn’t know” is off limits, so you say “He knows not to say anything.” What is the best poem or poetry to pen? Consider the famous example of someone picking peddles off a flower saying “She loves me, she loves me not” or “He loves me, he loves me not”. What

    is meaning of the same: “-“

    • 599739 views
    • 67 answers
    • 221095 votes
  • Asked on May 1, 2021 in Grammar.

    I remember talking in a foreign language (i.e. bribery) that was more common than in English. Is the original Elizabethan gospel copied? (This will make more sense in the book of James Version). What should I do if I know ye not that.? Is “Don’t you know.” wrong instead of “Don’t you know”? Is there an archaic form still used today? Can you give me feedback on my contraction but dont want to use the lumpy “he don’t know.”? “He doesn’t know” is off limits, so you say “He knows not to say anything.” What is the best poem or poetry to pen? Consider the famous example of someone picking peddles off a flower saying “She loves me, she loves me not” or “He loves me, he loves me not”. What

    is meaning of the same: “-“

    • 599739 views
    • 67 answers
    • 221095 votes
  • Is the only interchangeable? “He

    is a just man” cannot be changed to “He is an only man.” The

    positioning of the * makes all the difference, because “He is just a man” would mean “He is only a man”, nor it makes any sense to say that it is assual. ” (Here the placement of the * makes all the difference, because “He is just a man”, and without saying that has been mending all the previous characters) Just

    can mean fair or upright. Just can mean only.. You can also mean recently.

    So just is only interchangeable with only where it is meant to be interchangeable with only.

    My opinion is that this sentence is very ambiguous, because it look like “I just ate pasta”

    I just ate pasta. Does this mean to utter “I just ate pasta” or anything like that too? Only the past tense is ambiguous—for true. Since I just ate pasta, means “All I ate was pasta” or it could mean “I ate pasta a few minutes ago.” I always eat pasta and of course I eat it, but can other people just mean that if I eat pasta, I only eat pasta? If a non-native speaker says “I just eat pasta” then it can be ambiguous due to non-native speakers sometimes using present tense as past.

    • 780892 views
    • 5 answers
    • 287780 votes