Category: slider perent
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Grammar Rule 9
The words its and it’s are two different words with different meanings. The dog has hurt its leg. He says it’s two o’clock.
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Grammar Rule 8
Treat collective nouns (e.g. committee, company, board of directors) as singular OR plural. In BrE a collective noun is usually treated as plural, needing a plural verb and pronoun. In AmE a collective noun is often treated as singular, needing a singular verb and pronoun. The committee are having sandwiches for lunch. Then they will go to London. (typically BrE) The…
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Grammar Rule 7
When using two or more adjectives together, the usual order is opinion-adjective + fact-adjective + noun. (There are some additional rules for the order of fact adjectives.) I saw a nice French table. That was an interesting Shakespearian play.
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Grammar Rule 6
Adjectives usually come before a noun (except when a verb separates the adjective from the noun). I have a big dog. She married a handsome Italian man. (Her husband is rich.)
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Grammar Rule 5
When two singular subjects are connected by or, use a singular verb. The same is true for either/or and neither/nor. John or Mary is coming tonight. Either coffee or tea is fine. Neither John nor Mary was late.
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Grammar Rule 4
The subject and verb must agree in number, that is a singular subject needs a singular verb and a plural subject needs a plural verb. John works in London. That monk eats once a day. John and Mary work in London. Most people eat three meals a day.
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Grammar Rule 3
Every sentence must have a subject and a verb. An object is optional. Note that an imperative sentence may have a verb only, but the subject is understood. John teaches. John teaches English. Stop! (i.e. You stop!)
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Grammar Rule 2
The order of a basic positive sentence is Subject-Verb-Object. (Negative and question sentences may have a different order.) John loves Mary. They were driving their car to Bangkok.
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Grammar Rule 1
1. A sentence starts with a capital letter and ends with a period/full stop, a question mark or an exclamation mark. see Punctuation The fat cat sat on the mat. Where do you live? My dog is very clever!