| bio | website | |
|---|---|---|
| location | ||
| age | ||
| visits | member for | 8 months |
| seen | May 15 at 22:22 | |
| stats | profile views | 16 |
web designer and developer.
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May 5 |
comment |
“How does two friends” vs. “how do two friends” Does is singular, do is plural. Two friends is plural. The second one is correct. |
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Mar 29 |
comment |
Is there a correct grammatical way to state computer model number in plural form? That actually sounds awful =/ |
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Mar 29 |
comment |
Tense agreement after “if it means that” I think "I won't write you if it means that I won't need to miss you" sounds best |
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Feb 28 |
comment |
When would I use “once” versus “nonce”? Nonce is an adjective, once is an adverb |
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Jan 21 |
comment |
When to use “this" and when to use “that”? This refers to a primary matter. That refers to something secondary or external. For a tertiary aspect, you may use "the other." For example, say you were visiting colleges and you were currently at "this" school (as in the one that you're in). You're also currently talking about another school ("that" school). But there's another school not part of the conversation. You may say: this school, that school, and the other school are all really great options. |
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Jan 6 |
comment |
Is there a word to describe an offensive term reclaimed by the offended group Double standard? |
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Jan 6 |
comment |
Meaning and sentence structure of “Why would we have thought otherwise?” "Why did we thought otherwise" is grammatically incorrect. Another way to say "Why would we have thought otherwise" is "Why would we think otherwise." |
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Jan 5 |
comment |
Can “in” be replaced by “with”? Well, to be honest, nobody says "I'm covered with mud!" But you can say "He's all covered with mud" and that seems pretty synonymous to using in |
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Jan 4 |
awarded | Commentator |
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Jan 2 |
comment |
“Does he go bowling?” or “Doesn't he go bowling?” I think the OP isn't as interested in the usage as much as why the response to both is yes when one is negated. |
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Jan 2 |
comment |
Is “an archives” a grammatically correct phrase? If so, is it an exception or are there others like it? Yes, they're correct. The word chamber apparently works the same way. |
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Jan 2 |
revised |
When is “place” used as “home”? deleted 1 characters in body |
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Jan 2 |
comment |
“Favored” vs. “favorited” Maybe "Jack added Jill's video to his favorites," is better. |
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Jan 2 |
answered | When is “place” used as “home”? |
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Jan 1 |
revised |
What does “made it up on the spot” mean? added 289 characters in body |
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Jan 1 |
answered | What does “made it up on the spot” mean? |
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Jan 1 |
revised |
Are these terms considered uncivilized to native English speakers? added 507 characters in body |
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Jan 1 |
answered | Are these terms considered uncivilized to native English speakers? |
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Jan 1 |
revised |
What does “off to” mean? added 2 characters in body |
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Sep 17 |
revised |
Word for the “strength” of an adjective added 99 characters in body |