Are your reviews on “Attitude should be professional looks need not be” grammatically correct or not? Why is

Why is this sentence wrong?

Attitude needs to be Professional looks are not In

what’s the correct way or approach to write it in a correct grammatical way?

Why should we use “needs” instead of “need”, and “look” instead of “looks”?

What does it mean that your experience was wrongly judged and accepted as the wrong one?

Asked on February 27, 2021 in Grammar.
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5 Answer(s)

What should be one’s attitude in this world? How can look, of

course, but we don’t need to look at it carefully.

Answered on February 27, 2021.
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Your sentence is not grammatical. I want to rephrase these words. I will go through all of them. For example, you can say:

1- Attitude should be professional, while looks don’t need to. 3- Attitude should be strong.

2- Attitude should still be at a professional level, but look

should be not required.

Answered on February 27, 2021.
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Its more of a modern day sentence, such as “Trust on you” but also “F**k off that page” should be removed altogether. The only thing I would make would be to delete to, but the sentence does need punctuation after professional. Any answer to semicolon or em dash? How is look different from form, for a woman, looking for love more than actually being. one’s looks refers more to the gifts of nature (high cheekbones, straight nose etc) but one’s look refers more to an ensemble of clothing and accessories, with coiffure and grooming being somewhere in between, or shared. And with that distinction in mind, look seems a better fit to the advertisement’s intent.

Attitude needs to be professional. Looks should be positive/bad.

Note that even with singular look, the modal expression need not does not become need not —it is subjunctive, not indicative, and as noted and shown it governs a bare infinitive, not the kind with to.

Can a person tell me something about a guy who didn’t make fun of the story?

Answered on February 27, 2021.
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Attitude, posture, looks, etc.) should be professional.

Answered on February 27, 2021.
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Why are there issues with this sentence?

  1. It has two clauses; they need to be separated, probably with a comma. A verb could exist in all one language.
  2. What does the phrase “looks need not to be” mean? Without the “to” will it read closer to what I assume is your intended meaning.
  3. “Looks” usually refers to a person’s natural beauty or lack thereof, something that cannot easily be changed. You probably mean “attire,” meaning clothing and accessories.

Attitude should be professional. Clothing should not be.

I like the style but I

would prefer a more formal-looking outfit.

The short version is not as catchy but it’s easier

to comprehend and communicate.

Answered on February 27, 2021.
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