advancegrammar.blogspot.com
ADVANCED ENGLISH GRAMMAR: August 2009
http://advancegrammar.blogspot.com/2009_08_01_archive.html
Part of speech, tenses in active and passive, sentences, clauses, reported speech, articles, capitalization, punctuations, and so on. QUANTIFIERS WITH AND WITHOUT “OF”. We usually need to put of after quantifiers. That are followed by a pronoun, a determiner. Or a possessive form. I made some fresh coffee and handed a cup to Adam. Some of my jewellery is missing. Don’t pay any attention to what she says. Have you seen any of these new light bulbs in the shops yet? Snow is now covering much of the country.
advancegrammar.blogspot.com
ADVANCED ENGLISH GRAMMAR: October 2009
http://advancegrammar.blogspot.com/2009_10_01_archive.html
Part of speech, tenses in active and passive, sentences, clauses, reported speech, articles, capitalization, punctuations, and so on. Capitalize the first word in any sentence, the personal pronoun I. And the first word of a direct quotation if it is a complete statement. Night falls quickly in the mountains. The door was open when I. He looked at the cake and said, “ D. Iets, like pie crust, are made to be broken.”. 1) PROPER NOUNS AND ADJECTIVES. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Barbara Walters. Capitalize words d...
advancegrammar.blogspot.com
ADVANCED ENGLISH GRAMMAR: CAPITALIZATION
http://advancegrammar.blogspot.com/2009/10/capitalization.html
Part of speech, tenses in active and passive, sentences, clauses, reported speech, articles, capitalization, punctuations, and so on. Capitalize the first word in any sentence, the personal pronoun I. And the first word of a direct quotation if it is a complete statement. Night falls quickly in the mountains. The door was open when I. He looked at the cake and said, “ D. Iets, like pie crust, are made to be broken.”. 1) PROPER NOUNS AND ADJECTIVES. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Barbara Walters. Capitalize words d...
advancegrammar.blogspot.com
ADVANCED ENGLISH GRAMMAR: July 2009
http://advancegrammar.blogspot.com/2009_07_01_archive.html
Part of speech, tenses in active and passive, sentences, clauses, reported speech, articles, capitalization, punctuations, and so on. Phrasal verbs with a verb preposition. Some phrasal verbs consist of a verb followed by a proposition. However, in the case of a phrasal verb, the verb followed by the preposition forms an expression with an idiomatic meaning. For example, the phrasal verb to come across. Is an idiomatic expression with the meaning to find. Similarly, the phrasal verb to frown on. In these...
advancegrammar.blogspot.com
ADVANCED ENGLISH GRAMMAR: September 2009
http://advancegrammar.blogspot.com/2009_09_01_archive.html
Part of speech, tenses in active and passive, sentences, clauses, reported speech, articles, capitalization, punctuations, and so on. Italics are used to indicate emphasis, to mark foreign terms and expressions not commonly used, and to highlight titles of publications and names of certain vehicles such as ships, spacecraft, and the like. Use the underscore for any item that would be italicized in print. 8220;I didn’t blue. Paint; I wanted lavender. 2) FOREIGN WORDS AND PHRASES. Her hat is chic,. It is i...
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