- despojar a - Despojaron al árbol de todas sus hojas
The dictionary gives this example sentence for despojar: "Despojaron al árbol de todas sus hojas " Like all beginners in Spanish, I learned that the "personal a" marks the direct object when it refers to people, but that it is not used with inanimate objects In case, "tree" is inanimate and the
- Welsh: dudwch - WordReference Forums
Hi Dudwch I met this word on page 17 of my beginners work book for the Dysgu Cymraeg mynediad course I can see it is an instruction for something to do with a partner: Efo’r tiwtor, wedyn efo partner, dudwch: Then a list of words Is it a form of say dweud? Other searches have come up
- 的 - 我 (的)爸爸 | WordReference Forums
Hi In advance, I don't speak chinese Today I watched a Chinese learning TV program for beginners by chance and want to know about something The thing is that, in the program they said 他是我爸爸,and also said 这是我的男朋友 So, is there any difference by inputting '的' ? And can I say 他是我的爸爸 or 这是我的爸爸?
- I like soup, and pizza (comma) | WordReference Forums
Dear friends, I found this sentence in a ppt: "I like soup, and pizza " This sentence is for beginners to demonstrate the use of the conjunction "and" However, when I saw that comma, I felt there was a mistake At first glance I thought it was just on the first slide But looking at the
- Norwegian: P. S. (letter) | WordReference Forums
I know very little Norwegian, but I am attempting to write a short letter using phrases beginners learn in Norwegian (hello, how are you, etc ) What if I wanted to add a post-script (P S ) to the end of the letter?
- Please, yes v. Yes, please | WordReference Forums
A mature adult Beginners' English group meets every week Yesterday we learned about offering, accepting and refusing food and drink There seemed to be a wider range of "natural" answers to shortened forms of questions "More wine?" answered with "yes, please" sounded a bit better than "please, yes" but the latter did not jar
- follow-on follow-up | WordReference Forums
Then, are they interchangeable in these example sentences below without any difference? "This course for bridge players with some experience is intended as a follow-on to the Beginners' course " "One man was arrested during the raid and another during a follow-up operation "
- I work on Monday vs Monday - WordReference Forums
I am clear In an English book for beginners titled English for Life, Elementary level There's this passage that reads: "I normally don't go to work at the weekend On Saturday, I go shopping On Sunday morning, I always go to church" I do not know why these clearly erroneous, huge errors could have shunned the editor's hawk eyes
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