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  • I believe this is because the sentence is using the subjunctive mood, which is used to describe hypothetical or unreal situations. Does the giant say whether

    someone is alive or dead?

    In modern English, it mostly appears in forms like “It is important that he see

    a doctor if I am interested in physical therapy.”

    Where the bare infinitive can be the same as the subjunctive “see” don’t look different. If its been an infinitive for long, and also the bare infinitive for long? When we use verb to be, we can see it: It is

    important that he **be** here on time-and, I say he said his intention to be.

    Where on earth is there a person who just wants to educate himself?

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  • Asked on March 13, 2021 in Meaning.

    What definition of to see is being used here is

    3 a : to form a mental picture of : visualize

    So you can parse this as

    I visualized (what did I visualize?
    myself ) (doing what I did?. Do
    you have

    any feelings about going on holiday?

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  • Asked on March 4, 2021 in Other.

    Grammatically, the subject is not these months, to study is it, and is always singular.

    What do you call anticipatory it? What’s it like to think of 2014 as “the
    year of moving towards something”
    What is that thing?
    It was these months (towards which the whole year moved).

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  • Asked on March 4, 2021 in Other.

    This is not a very well-written sentence. But it’s not too difficult if you break it down into pieces.

    If they are too scared to

    do something, they have confidence. But sometimes the confidence is low. Maybe… you think them based on something? What can’t people do?

    They can’t manage or

    deal with some kind of uncertainty. What kind of uncertainty do we need for some days?

    …not being convinced that…

    They don’t firmly believe that something is true What are some things people who don’t believe in truth?

    How can the world be changed when they know what they ought to say and believe?

    And so the sentence could be rephrased like this:

    Their confidence is so low that they cannot approach a foreigner. Is it low because they cannot deal with being uncertain. This is because they are uncertain. I should not be so sure from their next shift. I can’t begin, I’m afraid. They are not sure what to say. Their writing is incomplete.

    If this is a sentence that is too long then it will only be a very short sentence. When you break it into pieces, you realize that “the uncertainty of not being convinced” is repetitive – if they’re uncertain, that means that they’re not convinced, so it doesn’t make much sense to say that they have the uncertainty of not being convinced.

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  • Asked on March 3, 2021 in Other.

    How can I take a look at each sentence.?

    1. You would use

    this like “This work is making me tired ” or “Listening to Phillip is making him tired “. It isn’t almost about doing something against his will; it is just about something having an effect on anyone:the subject is why the object is tired.

    1. Getting someone tired

    This is not idiomatic or fluent. We do use get with tired but we would use it like this: “You got tired” or “Jonathan was tired of listening to Phillip” If doing into this sense just means becoming just about anything, and that’s the real meaning of getting. We don’t usually use it transitively, like “This work is getting me tired. Thank you very much ” The use of ” get adjective seems to be very tricky for English learners, so I recommend that they avoid it until they have studied it thoroughly.

    1. Having someone tired

    This is also not idiomatic or fluent. Don’t use the data.

    1. My mom used

    to call me out and tell me this isn’t that hard. “This hard work is tiring me out ” or “Listening to Phillip was tiring Jonathan out. It’s more informal than #1, but also implies “very tired” or “completely tired”.

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  • Asked on March 2, 2021 in Other.

    It seems that the word you’re researching may be elliptical. It means something like “deliberately obscure” or “intentionally vague” or “cryptic”, but it also means “formed like an ellipse (an oval)”

    Because “they spoke in elliptical order at a half-round table” makes a punning reference both to how they were speaking and to the shape they were in.

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  • Asked on February 28, 2021 in Other.

    The term might be gray market. The black market is the sale of goods that are stolen or fraudulent; gray market goods are legitimate but are not supposed to be sold on that market.

    I know of no official term for it, but I would be interested to know for sure if

    anyone called it.Parallel import?

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  • Asked on February 27, 2021 in Other.

    Which are the similarities and differences? Interestingly, the correct wording is “He would have watched more movies”. The rule of thumb is that we use be as you are, and have as you do. What would

    be the effect from an eating feces
    if He’d kept eating the
    food but would’ve grown taller

    than

    if he’d stayed hungry
    For example, If He’d
    eaten the entire food he would have

    learned more He would have learned more He’d have learned more He’d have observed the sun on his face, and probably would have hung out the window.

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  • Asked on February 27, 2021 in Other.

    It is possible to say at a late age but it’s more common to say at an advanced age if you mean “old” (although that delicate phrasing is becoming less common). At a late age is mostly used to refer to “later than we’d expect” & not exactly “old”. Although Argentina herself, in

    a 1936 interview with Elizabeth Borton, describes her mother as having begun dancing at a late age… Compared with other farmers,

    a higher proportion of those farmers who inherited at a late age are single… I became such at

    a late age… As you see, these examples

    mean something closer to “later than usual”, not literally “old”.


    Is it possible to say at an old age in your life? If so, then why? I think the issue here is not so much “at/in that old age” as your use of such. You’re not using such in a completely fluent way. This is a different topic, but you’re not using such. If I have an 80 year old, what has it been like? In other words, we use such with a noun or “old age” for comparing or defining things, not simply as an intensifier or,,audience” or “..”

    Here’s an example of someone using at an older age :

    In modern days we put old people away into houses and marvel when a person is “still active” at an old age.


    And if you’re using pronouns, determiners are going to be used for these phrases. If i

    was 16, I asked not to take him to such long distance to be his age, and of course at a less intelligent age.

    Why am I doing exams at a late age?

    I don’t know she knows half the adventures I had, and I wouldn’t send her over the edge at her advanced age. She is so stupid. She has never seen so many stories I have told her. What
    is advanced age? I heard that, Chambliss Rose, and you’d be surprised to find out just how much of your storied past I do know about. ”


    Almost all of your English grammar is fine, it’s just a question of what’s both fluent and common usage. In conclusion, most of your grammar is fine, it’s just a question of what’s fluent and common usage. My age is 23 and still I want to be like you. But I’m surprised what you accomplish at that age. Is that really a real thing? Is it a myth that you ran a marathon in your early 20s? What were your thoughts on “You ran a marathon in your early 20? Why? ” Does talking about age a general concept?

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