| bio | website | |
|---|---|---|
| location | ||
| age | ||
| visits | member for | 6 months |
| seen | Feb 1 at 7:26 | |
| stats | profile views | 5 |
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Nov 9 |
accepted | Why is present continuous used in “A key goal is learning to read”? |
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Nov 9 |
comment |
Why is present continuous used in “A key goal is learning to read”? Thank you a lot. |
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Nov 9 |
comment |
Why is present continuous used in “A key goal is learning to read”? Thank you for the reply. Now I understand the structure of the sentence. I only don't fully understand the meaning. The goal is learning, rather than the goal is knowing how to read (acquired by leaning). Right? |
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Nov 9 |
revised |
Why is present continuous used in “A key goal is learning to read”? added 204 characters in body |
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Nov 9 |
comment |
Why is present continuous used in “A key goal is learning to read”? @BillFranke, yes, it was my fix. |
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Nov 9 |
comment |
Why is present continuous used in “A key goal is learning to read”? I just missed comma after Noah so it sounded like he fixed. But I was just addressing him, like: Noah, I fixed the sentence ... my apologies. |
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Nov 9 |
awarded | Editor |
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Nov 9 |
revised |
Why is present continuous used in “A key goal is learning to read”? added 2 characters in body |
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Nov 9 |
revised |
Why is present continuous used in “A key goal is learning to read”? edited tags |
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Nov 9 |
asked | Why is present continuous used in “A key goal is learning to read”? |
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Nov 8 |
comment |
Should simple present “get” be used here, and why? Thanks for your replies, but maybe you can advise me, is the "English Grammar In Use" is the best source to learn English grammar? Because I always used only this book and now I'm thinking, maybe there is a better one? |
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Nov 4 |
awarded | Scholar |
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Nov 4 |
accepted | Should simple present “get” be used here, and why? |
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Nov 4 |
awarded | Student |
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Nov 3 |
asked | Should simple present “get” be used here, and why? |