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Asked on December 22, 2021 in Meaning.
When rereading an adverb, why I should divide it into two parts? Does “I had planned to cite my sources…” deliver the same message? How can I make a “new” message clear? How can I avoid a dumb question like this? In normal conversation, filter them out. Do we filter them out? If I edit them out of my writing, we might not have to fret over the placement of a modifier.
- 267407 views
- 6 answers
- 98474 votes
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Asked on December 22, 2021 in Meaning.
When rereading an adverb, why I should divide it into two parts? Does “I had planned to cite my sources…” deliver the same message? How can I make a “new” message clear? How can I avoid a dumb question like this? In normal conversation, filter them out. Do we filter them out? If I edit them out of my writing, we might not have to fret over the placement of a modifier.
- 267407 views
- 6 answers
- 98474 votes
-
Asked on December 22, 2021 in Meaning.
When rereading an adverb, why I should divide it into two parts? Does “I had planned to cite my sources…” deliver the same message? How can I make a “new” message clear? How can I avoid a dumb question like this? In normal conversation, filter them out. Do we filter them out? If I edit them out of my writing, we might not have to fret over the placement of a modifier.
- 267407 views
- 6 answers
- 98474 votes
-
Asked on December 22, 2021 in Meaning.
When rereading an adverb, why I should divide it into two parts? Does “I had planned to cite my sources…” deliver the same message? How can I make a “new” message clear? How can I avoid a dumb question like this? In normal conversation, filter them out. Do we filter them out? If I edit them out of my writing, we might not have to fret over the placement of a modifier.
- 267407 views
- 6 answers
- 98474 votes
-
Asked on December 22, 2021 in Meaning.
When rereading an adverb, why I should divide it into two parts? Does “I had planned to cite my sources…” deliver the same message? How can I make a “new” message clear? How can I avoid a dumb question like this? In normal conversation, filter them out. Do we filter them out? If I edit them out of my writing, we might not have to fret over the placement of a modifier.
- 267407 views
- 6 answers
- 98474 votes