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Asked on April 3, 2021 in Grammar.
The word can only be used when it is the subject of 2 words. That might sound confused, but it just means it is like the words I, she, and he. Then there is the word everyone for the words we, our,and them to show the correct meaning. So there is no confusion, so please nip to the end of this sentence. “Just as said, each of these words can only be subject of the verb itself. What is the difference with who? How can someone confuse that pair?
- 715124 views
- 85 answers
- 263189 votes
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Asked on April 3, 2021 in Grammar.
The word can only be used when it is the subject of 2 words. That might sound confused, but it just means it is like the words I, she, and he. Then there is the word everyone for the words we, our,and them to show the correct meaning. So there is no confusion, so please nip to the end of this sentence. “Just as said, each of these words can only be subject of the verb itself. What is the difference with who? How can someone confuse that pair?
- 715124 views
- 85 answers
- 263189 votes
-
Asked on April 2, 2021 in Grammar.
The word can only be used when it is the subject of 2 words. That might sound confused, but it just means it is like the words I, she, and he. Then there is the word everyone for the words we, our,and them to show the correct meaning. So there is no confusion, so please nip to the end of this sentence. “Just as said, each of these words can only be subject of the verb itself. What is the difference with who? How can someone confuse that pair?
- 715124 views
- 85 answers
- 263189 votes
-
Asked on April 2, 2021 in Grammar.
The word can only be used when it is the subject of 2 words. That might sound confused, but it just means it is like the words I, she, and he. Then there is the word everyone for the words we, our,and them to show the correct meaning. So there is no confusion, so please nip to the end of this sentence. “Just as said, each of these words can only be subject of the verb itself. What is the difference with who? How can someone confuse that pair?
- 715124 views
- 85 answers
- 263189 votes
-
Asked on April 2, 2021 in Grammar.
The word can only be used when it is the subject of 2 words. That might sound confused, but it just means it is like the words I, she, and he. Then there is the word everyone for the words we, our,and them to show the correct meaning. So there is no confusion, so please nip to the end of this sentence. “Just as said, each of these words can only be subject of the verb itself. What is the difference with who? How can someone confuse that pair?
- 715124 views
- 85 answers
- 263189 votes
-
Asked on April 2, 2021 in Grammar.
The word can only be used when it is the subject of 2 words. That might sound confused, but it just means it is like the words I, she, and he. Then there is the word everyone for the words we, our,and them to show the correct meaning. So there is no confusion, so please nip to the end of this sentence. “Just as said, each of these words can only be subject of the verb itself. What is the difference with who? How can someone confuse that pair?
- 715124 views
- 85 answers
- 263189 votes
-
Asked on April 2, 2021 in Grammar.
The word can only be used when it is the subject of 2 words. That might sound confused, but it just means it is like the words I, she, and he. Then there is the word everyone for the words we, our,and them to show the correct meaning. So there is no confusion, so please nip to the end of this sentence. “Just as said, each of these words can only be subject of the verb itself. What is the difference with who? How can someone confuse that pair?
- 715124 views
- 85 answers
- 263189 votes
-
Asked on March 31, 2021 in Grammar.
The word can only be used when it is the subject of 2 words. That might sound confused, but it just means it is like the words I, she, and he. Then there is the word everyone for the words we, our,and them to show the correct meaning. So there is no confusion, so please nip to the end of this sentence. “Just as said, each of these words can only be subject of the verb itself. What is the difference with who? How can someone confuse that pair?
- 715124 views
- 85 answers
- 263189 votes