Wes Sayeed's Profile

2
Points

Questions
1

Answers
36

  • Asked on May 20, 2021 in Grammar.

    Both are grammatically correct. What is subject-auxiliary inversion?

    Even though this particular example you gave is an archaic form it’s still acceptable when you’re trying to give a more poetic or nostalgic feel. English is much looser on word order than other languages are on words (or so I’ve

    heard).

    • 599740 views
    • 67 answers
    • 221095 votes
  • Asked on May 20, 2021 in Grammar.

    Both are grammatically correct. What is subject-auxiliary inversion?

    Even though this particular example you gave is an archaic form it’s still acceptable when you’re trying to give a more poetic or nostalgic feel. English is much looser on word order than other languages are on words (or so I’ve

    heard).

    • 599740 views
    • 67 answers
    • 221095 votes
  • Asked on May 19, 2021 in Grammar.

    Both are grammatically correct. What is subject-auxiliary inversion?

    Even though this particular example you gave is an archaic form it’s still acceptable when you’re trying to give a more poetic or nostalgic feel. English is much looser on word order than other languages are on words (or so I’ve

    heard).

    • 599740 views
    • 67 answers
    • 221095 votes
  • Asked on May 19, 2021 in Grammar.

    Both are grammatically correct. What is subject-auxiliary inversion?

    Even though this particular example you gave is an archaic form it’s still acceptable when you’re trying to give a more poetic or nostalgic feel. English is much looser on word order than other languages are on words (or so I’ve

    heard).

    • 599740 views
    • 67 answers
    • 221095 votes
  • Asked on May 19, 2021 in Grammar.

    Both are grammatically correct. What is subject-auxiliary inversion?

    Even though this particular example you gave is an archaic form it’s still acceptable when you’re trying to give a more poetic or nostalgic feel. English is much looser on word order than other languages are on words (or so I’ve

    heard).

    • 599740 views
    • 67 answers
    • 221095 votes
  • Asked on May 18, 2021 in Grammar.

    Both are grammatically correct. What is subject-auxiliary inversion?

    Even though this particular example you gave is an archaic form it’s still acceptable when you’re trying to give a more poetic or nostalgic feel. English is much looser on word order than other languages are on words (or so I’ve

    heard).

    • 599740 views
    • 67 answers
    • 221095 votes
  • Asked on May 18, 2021 in Grammar.

    Both are grammatically correct. What is subject-auxiliary inversion?

    Even though this particular example you gave is an archaic form it’s still acceptable when you’re trying to give a more poetic or nostalgic feel. English is much looser on word order than other languages are on words (or so I’ve

    heard).

    • 599740 views
    • 67 answers
    • 221095 votes
  • Asked on May 18, 2021 in Grammar.

    Both are grammatically correct. What is subject-auxiliary inversion?

    Even though this particular example you gave is an archaic form it’s still acceptable when you’re trying to give a more poetic or nostalgic feel. English is much looser on word order than other languages are on words (or so I’ve

    heard).

    • 599740 views
    • 67 answers
    • 221095 votes
  • Asked on May 18, 2021 in Grammar.

    Both are grammatically correct. What is subject-auxiliary inversion?

    Even though this particular example you gave is an archaic form it’s still acceptable when you’re trying to give a more poetic or nostalgic feel. English is much looser on word order than other languages are on words (or so I’ve

    heard).

    • 599740 views
    • 67 answers
    • 221095 votes
  • Asked on May 18, 2021 in Grammar.

    Both are grammatically correct. What is subject-auxiliary inversion?

    Even though this particular example you gave is an archaic form it’s still acceptable when you’re trying to give a more poetic or nostalgic feel. English is much looser on word order than other languages are on words (or so I’ve

    heard).

    • 599740 views
    • 67 answers
    • 221095 votes