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#1
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| Having just finished college myself, I can testify that mental discipline is the greatest asset a college student can have while he's at school. Probably the Encyclopedia Britannica would provide one with the choicest information since it spends almost five pages expounding upon Shelley. There is no doubt that Ellen looked as though she were not feeling well. In my opinion it is not an incorrect assumption that he is wrong. At an early stage in his career, Pete Rose met a coach who kept urging him to go and analyze his motions while he was up at the plate. I hope that I can learn real English in this forum. Thanks a lot for your help in advance. |
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#2
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| Quote:
You don't need those last four words. Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
(The original sentence is not incorrect.) Quote:
The original sentence seemed to be saying Rose should do the analyzing while he was at the plate. |
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#3
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| Quote:
What do you think? :) |
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#4
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| Ronbee, Thanks a lot of for your assistance and I worked like a dog for the past week, therefore I am sorry for the late reply. Here are my (by Ha Ha) re-phrased sentences – link: http://www.hkedcity.net/ihouse_tools...62431&t=462078. Please also comment on those! Quote:
Should we still put an article ‘the’ before it? A thousand thanks to you is not enough! |
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#5
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| It's hard to say why we say the Encyclopedia Britannica. An explanation eludes me at the present time. In any case, I do not think it would be wrong to leave it (the) out. As for:
They did okay with a couple of the sentences, but with the others they did not know what was wrong with them. (Texan Belle did the best rewrites.) Discipline is the ability to stick to a task without allowing anything to distract you from what you are trying to accomplish. The word mental in mental discipline is almost superfluous, but it is used, I think, because we are talking about an activity that is mostly mental, like studying. |
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#6
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| Hello everyone. I had a doubt regarding a sentence. "My hair are growing long." or will this be stated as "My hair is growing long." Please respond soon, Thank you. |
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#7
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| "Hair" is uncountable. "My hair is growing/getting long" is correct. |
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