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150
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Asked on August 13, 2021 in Grammar.
What do you think of this girl that barely speaks for ten minutes actually? I would say she couldn’t solve an extremely challenging problem, in ten minutes whereas we have to spend longer. You don’t need to say given that, although there’s nothing grammatically wrong with doing so. The choice may depend on your context.
Is it wrong to assume “impressive” in a 10 minute work? I agree with @dadrat’s comment in its
entirety. Why am I doing there?
- 433332 views
- 105 answers
- 159405 votes
-
Asked on August 13, 2021 in Grammar.
What do you think of this girl that barely speaks for ten minutes actually? I would say she couldn’t solve an extremely challenging problem, in ten minutes whereas we have to spend longer. You don’t need to say given that, although there’s nothing grammatically wrong with doing so. The choice may depend on your context.
Is it wrong to assume “impressive” in a 10 minute work? I agree with @dadrat’s comment in its
entirety. Why am I doing there?
- 433332 views
- 105 answers
- 159405 votes
-
Asked on August 13, 2021 in Grammar.
What do you think of this girl that barely speaks for ten minutes actually? I would say she couldn’t solve an extremely challenging problem, in ten minutes whereas we have to spend longer. You don’t need to say given that, although there’s nothing grammatically wrong with doing so. The choice may depend on your context.
Is it wrong to assume “impressive” in a 10 minute work? I agree with @dadrat’s comment in its
entirety. Why am I doing there?
- 433332 views
- 105 answers
- 159405 votes
-
Asked on August 13, 2021 in Grammar.
What do you think of this girl that barely speaks for ten minutes actually? I would say she couldn’t solve an extremely challenging problem, in ten minutes whereas we have to spend longer. You don’t need to say given that, although there’s nothing grammatically wrong with doing so. The choice may depend on your context.
Is it wrong to assume “impressive” in a 10 minute work? I agree with @dadrat’s comment in its
entirety. Why am I doing there?
- 433332 views
- 105 answers
- 159405 votes
-
Asked on August 12, 2021 in Grammar.
What do you think of this girl that barely speaks for ten minutes actually? I would say she couldn’t solve an extremely challenging problem, in ten minutes whereas we have to spend longer. You don’t need to say given that, although there’s nothing grammatically wrong with doing so. The choice may depend on your context.
Is it wrong to assume “impressive” in a 10 minute work? I agree with @dadrat’s comment in its
entirety. Why am I doing there?
- 433332 views
- 105 answers
- 159405 votes
-
Asked on August 11, 2021 in Grammar.
What do you think of this girl that barely speaks for ten minutes actually? I would say she couldn’t solve an extremely challenging problem, in ten minutes whereas we have to spend longer. You don’t need to say given that, although there’s nothing grammatically wrong with doing so. The choice may depend on your context.
Is it wrong to assume “impressive” in a 10 minute work? I agree with @dadrat’s comment in its
entirety. Why am I doing there?
- 433332 views
- 105 answers
- 159405 votes
-
Asked on August 11, 2021 in Grammar.
What do you think of this girl that barely speaks for ten minutes actually? I would say she couldn’t solve an extremely challenging problem, in ten minutes whereas we have to spend longer. You don’t need to say given that, although there’s nothing grammatically wrong with doing so. The choice may depend on your context.
Is it wrong to assume “impressive” in a 10 minute work? I agree with @dadrat’s comment in its
entirety. Why am I doing there?
- 433332 views
- 105 answers
- 159405 votes
-
Asked on August 10, 2021 in Grammar.
What do you think of this girl that barely speaks for ten minutes actually? I would say she couldn’t solve an extremely challenging problem, in ten minutes whereas we have to spend longer. You don’t need to say given that, although there’s nothing grammatically wrong with doing so. The choice may depend on your context.
Is it wrong to assume “impressive” in a 10 minute work? I agree with @dadrat’s comment in its
entirety. Why am I doing there?
- 433332 views
- 105 answers
- 159405 votes
-
Asked on August 10, 2021 in Grammar.
What do you think of this girl that barely speaks for ten minutes actually? I would say she couldn’t solve an extremely challenging problem, in ten minutes whereas we have to spend longer. You don’t need to say given that, although there’s nothing grammatically wrong with doing so. The choice may depend on your context.
Is it wrong to assume “impressive” in a 10 minute work? I agree with @dadrat’s comment in its
entirety. Why am I doing there?
- 433332 views
- 105 answers
- 159405 votes
-
Asked on August 10, 2021 in Grammar.
What do you think of this girl that barely speaks for ten minutes actually? I would say she couldn’t solve an extremely challenging problem, in ten minutes whereas we have to spend longer. You don’t need to say given that, although there’s nothing grammatically wrong with doing so. The choice may depend on your context.
Is it wrong to assume “impressive” in a 10 minute work? I agree with @dadrat’s comment in its
entirety. Why am I doing there?
- 433332 views
- 105 answers
- 159405 votes