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Asked on March 6, 2021 in Grammar.
What is the difference between “gets slapped” and “is slapped”? ” Both are correct on the facts. I would easily switch “is” and “gets” in ashleedawg’s examples and still get exactly the same meanings. Is “got slapped” sounds more like a formal or formal event?
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Asked on March 3, 2021 in Other.
For all I know. Just all the truth I know. People normally say this when they think they know very little, what do they believe these days? What is your opinion of ‘this
family has no expertise at all,’ as far as I know? The most apt clichu00e9 of all of what people say to say is ‘you know at least bit about something’, and may even be one of them at the time. No one
ever knows everything’, but they don’t feel like they’ve actually spoken to someone who knows everything.
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Asked on March 3, 2021 in Other.
How can you break it down into 2 sentences?
What is an Executor?
In sentence, the rule is that the reason for having a “which” clause modifies the most recent noun in the sentence. So grammatically so it sort of modifies clusters. In other words, your audience will rule out a cluster. Assuming you don’t understand who to speak to, the verb conjugation “are” also doesn’t agree with you. (It’s legitimate to use conjugation to skip referents this way)
That means the audience will skip backward to “nodes. Assuming your audience is even a little bit technical, they’ll know the “which” clause probably isn’t defining nulls, either, and if they parse fast enough and remember the word “executors,” they’ll know executors are what you’re talking about. Still, I am using plain sentences. I am unsure how to explain it. How can
I avoid ambiguity?
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