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Asked on March 18, 2021 in American english.
How does this all get complicated? In English, the conjunction “are” is not used before a noun (canon, in your example) WITHOUT the one letter word “a” following it. I
am a coward.” If I go against her or go against her/him, I consider him/her “respectfully offensive.” I humbly reply “okay, you are a coward.” For
instance, “Fight back, you are a coward,” but doesn’t say, like a “you are a coward” is it’s own sentence.
How can I fight back! You are a coward. But you don’t know what I mean. It’s unfair. ” (using it as an adverb, but that sounds like a poor English translation of a subtitled martial arts movie).
In your writing, leave “are” out. When it’s a direct me-accusing-you statement, there should be no word before “coward” except maybe another adjective, such as “white bellied”. How
shall I describe this article?
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