rogermue's Profile

3
Points

Questions
1

Answers
84

  • Asked on May 2, 2021 in Meaning.

    Why is there a special word order to “out” before a verb? The bear came out of its den. If the normal word order is ‘May God save us’, try it again.

    When you place “out” before the verb as in “Out came the bear’s den”, the sentence gets a lot of drama. Anything out of the normal word order automatically catches the attention and has a special effect.

    • 599595 views
    • 15 answers
    • 221401 votes
  • Why the enclosure is a specific word for what you mean by that? What is an OALD definition of a piece of land surrounded by a fence or

    wall?

    • 543352 views
    • 8 answers
    • 200191 votes
  • Asked on March 27, 2021 in Grammar.

    (Wikipedia, YouTube) / Tuesday, September 22 / 21 / 29. The meeting will be held on Tuesday.

    How do I use words in this sentence to a question? I simply add an adjective to the verb from this

    sentence and I get When will the meeting be?

    Any other positioning of the verbs is wrong.

    • 593255 views
    • 2 answers
    • 219103 votes
  • Asked on March 27, 2021 in Grammar.

    (Wikipedia, YouTube) / Tuesday, September 22 / 21 / 29. The meeting will be held on Tuesday.

    How do I use words in this sentence to a question? I simply add an adjective to the verb from this

    sentence and I get When will the meeting be?

    Any other positioning of the verbs is wrong.

    • 593255 views
    • 2 answers
    • 219103 votes
  • Asked on March 26, 2021 in Grammar.

    What in a book is not a question? In an internet bookshop the store assistant may ask the client “What book do you want and why?” What are some descriptions and examples of novel and garden books?

    Which book is always ask and what books are cited? When a shop assistant points at a table like this with a lot of books, he might ask, “What book do you want to see? How are these books? ”

    “what is your view?

    • 644418 views
    • 1 answers
    • 238396 votes
  • Asked on March 20, 2021 in Grammar.

    Nouns in compound adjectives don’t take a plural form: a two-year old child, a three-year old child, a five-minute walk or a five minutes’ walk.

    http://www.grammar.cl/english/compound-adjectives. www.grammar.cl Is

    there a way I can get at a fast-access htm?

    • 816239 views
    • 12 answers
    • 303275 votes
  • Asked on March 20, 2021 in Grammar.

    Nouns in compound adjectives don’t take a plural form: a two-year old child, a three-year old child, a five-minute walk or a five minutes’ walk.

    http://www.grammar.cl/english/compound-adjectives. www.grammar.cl Is

    there a way I can get at a fast-access htm?

    • 816239 views
    • 12 answers
    • 303275 votes
  • lmotoa (also called oxymoron) both has two same adjectives: mous strong and moros stupid. As for other adjectives, they say that there is no difference between the two terms. oxymoron means any phrase in any speech containing osmosis, no ostremations, or any contradiction. https://en.wikipedia.org/?p=2614241927. Wikipedia:

    Org/wiki/Oxymoron.index.html?

    • 881751 views
    • 7 answers
    • 329043 votes
  • Asked on March 16, 2021 in Meaning.

    Adjectives ending in -ic form the adverb with “already”. poetic poetry, systematic systematic systematically automatic automatically.

    If public is a public exception then the exception applies. All public users are different from public. And its only natural that speakers in the course of time extend the general rule to public and form publically. I would see this as a natural “pruning” and rectification of the system. On test, as is always the case with forms, there can be no difference between the two. The first is the older irregular form, still preached by a lot of grammars, the second is the newer and regular form and in this case I must say that sometimes speakers have more sense than grammars or grammarians.

    It should also be the task of dictionaries and grammars to regularize language and not to fix irregularities for all times.

    • 874223 views
    • 5 answers
    • 324782 votes
  • Asked on March 13, 2021 in Other.

    I just know it’s the first time I’ve ever flown to America.

    What sentences are that clause? I wouldn’t say it is a relative clause. Is there any empty subject, “it” is the percursory subject and that-clause is the main subject.

    Though it is not very stylistic it would be possible to place the that-clause in subject position:

    that I fly to America is the first time.

    Is

    Relative clause a supplement? What is different about views? I am thinking how do I try and prove that we have no relative clause? Is there a royal family with three daughters?

    2 What if the king had a daughter ill?

    Once there was a king no children, God had given no children to him.

    If this is the first time “I flies to America” it’s a relative clause. The difference of the type is negligible. For reasons.

    • 935851 views
    • 3 answers
    • 348423 votes