JUNCINATOR's Profile

6
Points

Questions
3

Answers
7

  • Asked on March 29, 2021 in Other.

    If you wish to talk about what Joseph does during HIS holidays and not holidays in general, then the addition of the possessive pronoun is needed in order for your sentence to sound more natural.

    Does the passage of phrases “”the” and “his” mean holidays simply? As in – “Joseph goes hiking on the holidays to break the monotony of his daily life” Both sentence are grammatically correct with slightly different meanings.

    • 754309 views
    • 8 answers
    • 278008 votes
  • Asked on March 28, 2021 in Other.

    If you wish to talk about what Joseph does during HIS holidays and not holidays in general, then the addition of the possessive pronoun is needed in order for your sentence to sound more natural.

    Does the passage of phrases “”the” and “his” mean holidays simply? As in – “Joseph goes hiking on the holidays to break the monotony of his daily life” Both sentence are grammatically correct with slightly different meanings.

    • 754309 views
    • 8 answers
    • 278008 votes
  • Asked on March 28, 2021 in Other.

    If you wish to talk about what Joseph does during HIS holidays and not holidays in general, then the addition of the possessive pronoun is needed in order for your sentence to sound more natural.

    Does the passage of phrases “”the” and “his” mean holidays simply? As in – “Joseph goes hiking on the holidays to break the monotony of his daily life” Both sentence are grammatically correct with slightly different meanings.

    • 754309 views
    • 8 answers
    • 278008 votes
  • Asked on March 28, 2021 in Other.

    If you wish to talk about what Joseph does during HIS holidays and not holidays in general, then the addition of the possessive pronoun is needed in order for your sentence to sound more natural.

    Does the passage of phrases “”the” and “his” mean holidays simply? As in – “Joseph goes hiking on the holidays to break the monotony of his daily life” Both sentence are grammatically correct with slightly different meanings.

    • 754309 views
    • 8 answers
    • 278008 votes
  • Asked on March 28, 2021 in Other.

    If you wish to talk about what Joseph does during HIS holidays and not holidays in general, then the addition of the possessive pronoun is needed in order for your sentence to sound more natural.

    Does the passage of phrases “”the” and “his” mean holidays simply? As in – “Joseph goes hiking on the holidays to break the monotony of his daily life” Both sentence are grammatically correct with slightly different meanings.

    • 754309 views
    • 8 answers
    • 278008 votes
  • Asked on March 28, 2021 in Other.

    If you wish to talk about what Joseph does during HIS holidays and not holidays in general, then the addition of the possessive pronoun is needed in order for your sentence to sound more natural.

    Does the passage of phrases “”the” and “his” mean holidays simply? As in – “Joseph goes hiking on the holidays to break the monotony of his daily life” Both sentence are grammatically correct with slightly different meanings.

    • 754309 views
    • 8 answers
    • 278008 votes
  • Asked on February 27, 2021 in Other.

    How can you explain the idiomatic phrase? If you make it so that…., it is also a very vague expression in and of itself. All the examples are possible, but it seems they deliberately left out the details and don’t convey anything more than ‘do whatever is necessary to ensure something else is possible’. If you used a second to last sentence,

    • “Can you make it so that we can watch our friends’ favorite highlights.” Take the second and last sentence for example, “Can you make it so that we can watch their highlights? ”

    Make it so that could require downloading the highlights, or sharing them, or fixing the broken TV for all we know. They seem very marginal or irrelevant, but

    the exact means have just been deemed unimportant.

    • 1262767 views
    • 1 answers
    • 428298 votes