I'm new here so hello to all I'm just curious about that problem in the title I've checked in english grammar that in simple past tense when using negative form you should put first didn't and then after this the verb in infinitive But it sounds a little bizarre. He is curious, if i have already finished 1)is the change of 'yet' to 'already' necessary
He is curious, if i have finished yet I grab it from a novel i'm reading Even with the punctuation correction provided above by tripp, i can't say i ever heard anyone say this. A carefully chosen list of essential language for the beginning, body and ending of formal and informal english emails. I think to order a pizza, please I got curious about using infinitives after the verb think
In fact, i've perused my old grammar books and couldn't find such a. I'm just curious how many new englsih words are created in a day or per year If you could tell me the answer or please let me know where to find that infomation, i would really aprreciate it. I was just curious and looked at the lesson plans on ue.com And in the topic called presentation, there was an exercise to do with students This sentence was marked as an appropriate to use when doing a presentation
The only things that comes to my mind is. When reading an article, i found some sentence which makes me curious about meaning of adjectives Ex) boundaries of categories have become fuzzy and blurred It seems that they have the same meaning So i wonder that they can have different uses. Do portable electric devices (radio, cell phone, laptop etc) run on battery or off battery