copy and paste this google map to your website or blog!
Press copy button and paste into your blog or website.
(Please switch to 'HTML' mode when posting into your blog. Examples: WordPress Example, Blogger Example)
When making a presentation, do I use slides or foils? Talks are often supported by presentations via a projector (with a presentation program such as Powerpoint) During the talk, there is often a sentence like "next slide foil screen please" or "on t
that which belongs to or is connected with her This conflicts with a rule sometimes given by prescriptive grammarians (although many which -hunters describe this case as an exception) Geoff Pullum has written about this on Language Log
Grammar with gerund or Infinitive - English Language Learners Stack . . . The truth is that all options are syntactically valid - it's just that as @Geoff points out below, it's not easy to come up with a context where having worked would work (in a way that makes sense with but he still wasn't satisfied)
What is the meaning of chastened at in this sentence? And so she doesn't reply in words but is, for a moment silent, and only replies to Geoff's question by shaking her head It is in the sense of "shocked to silence" that Sophie is "chastened"
subject verb agreement - A group of boys is are - English Language . . . 7 As an antidote do all the people saying 'group is singular, therefore you should use is ', here's a Language Log post by Geoff Pullum arguing against plural agreement for quantificational uses of mass nouns As a L1 (British) English speaker, I would definite use are over is
What is the correct word order in the included sentence? As a non-native speaker I’m struggling with how to order the clauses in the following sentence: Because I, as a graduate of a vocational college and as someone who has already successfully absolve