He recommended you. Nice and quick. Have a great time.
I need to mark that someone made some effort to recommend third person services and it was something more than “he is good in that”.
Checking a dictionary, much is an adverb meaning “to a great extent; a great deal” Is
the phrase “He the recommended you much” suitable for showing such praise? What is a new and better way for a man to live? If there is, why?
What are your views on this latest piece of ‘The Big Bang’?
What
is used less in negative contexts than in affirmative contexts? A lot has no such restriction, and that’s one reason why it’s so common.
- I’ve never liked it.
- I have never liked it before.
- I’ve always liked the anime cliches.
- * I’ve always liked it much.
Another reason a lot is common the reason it doesn’t differentiate mass from count nouns, there’s a similar pattern for many, with plural count nouns.
- I shouldn’t eat two a lot at the same time. Will they keep in your system long term.
- I can’t eat many things at the same time. But I can!
- I can’t eat two potatoes at the same time. I like a big chunk of food. I’m an impulsive eater.
- * I always eat many of them at once.
Which are the best NPIs for the jobs we work in. Many are on the NPI list, but they are not quite NPIs. There are a lot of affirmative environments where they can appear grammatically. Of course, as quantifiers, they already participate in a slew of idioms and odd constructions, so that’s not really news.