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  • The passive with let - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Note that let does not allow a simple noun phrase as direct object: i e, *Bill let it is ungrammatical (except for the sense of let that means 'rent') Let normally occurs with a clause of some sort as complement, and passive is unlikely with a clausal object: Bill wants me to come to the party would be passivized to * For me to come to the
  • What kind of grammar explains the common string Let us?
    For example: Let us go, Let her go, Let him go, and let them go As you can see here, after "Let" the form of the object is in the objective case and the verb is all infinitive Let's is the short form of "Let us" and used when a person wants to ask for something to somebody, especially when the listener is recommend to do something together
  • apostrophe - Etymology of let us and lets - English Language . . .
    @Josh61 - Let us go then, you and I, When the evening is spread out against the sky Like a patient etherised upon a table; Let us go, through certain half-deserted streets, The muttering retreats Of restless nights in one-night cheap hotels And sawdust restaurants with oyster-shells: Streets that follow like a tedious argument Of insidious intent To lead you to an overwhelming question…
  • The phrase let alone - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    The sentence "I wouldn't go near a stingray, let alone pet one" implies that the speaker would stop far short of even being in a situation to do what follows the "let alone" clause They wouldn't go near a stingray, therefore it is out of the question that they would pet one
  • terminology - The word let as in without let or hindrance - English . . .
    It's "let" as a noun Two dictionaries with that example: AHD let let (2) noun 1 Something that hinders; an obstacle: free to investigate without let or hindrance It's also in Merriam-Webster: M-W let: something that impedes : obstruction ruled his little world without hindrance or let— "Let" as that noun has its own etymology: etymonline let
  • Which prepositions should I need to use when giving an exact time and . . .
    Let's meet at 11 at the stadium River side — "by" is usual, "at" is not found and although it seems a reasonable possibility, it is not found Let's meet at 11 by the river side Hill — "on" common, "at" rarer Let's meet at 11 on at the hill Cafe — "at" preferred but "in" also used let's meet at 11 at in the cafe …
  • grammar - Is let in Let us. . . . a verb? - English Language Usage . . .
    Let us stay indoors while the weather cools 1 This can be a request to someone in authority that means: [Please] let us stay indoors while the weather cools In this case the main verb is 'let' (meaning 'allow') and 'stay' is a bare infinitive 2 It can also be a first-person-plural 'imperative' I suggest that we stay indoors while the
  • pronouns - Difference between Let us go and Let we go? - English . . .
    "Let we go" or "let we us go" = Early Modern English (the subject is "we") Cf Late Modern English's "let us go", in which the subject is "you" which is not written because it is already understood "Let's go" = Late Modern English (the subject is "we") Cf other West Germanic languages: Laat we (ons) gaan (Dutch); Lassen wir uns gehen (German)




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