Rachel Adams
Key Member
- Joined
- Nov 4, 2018
- Member Type
- Student or Learner
- Native Language
- Russian
- Home Country
- Georgia
- Current Location
- Georgia
If I am talking about a fire in a building, can I say "Everything ended well. All stayed alive and well."
No. "Everyone survived" or "Everyone is [still] alive and well".
Should there be a comma after "morning"?Well, there is nothing wrong in saying it.
With that one comma, it makes "one morning" a dependent clause. That's fine. If you put a comma after up, "when we woke up" becomes a dependent clause, too. That's what I'd do, but I don't think it's necessary.Should there be a comma after "morning"?
One morning, when we woke up, we saw that a neighboring building was on fire.
"Ended well" is unnecessary, isn't it?
"Ended well" is unnecessary, isn't it?
It didn't end well; it didn't end as badly as it could have.
That's possible, but you can also pronounce them as two separate words (especially for emphasis).Do you pronounce it as /kʊdəv/
That's not a good example, because "could of" is often (ungrammatically) used instead of "could have". In such cases, "could of" is always wrong.like "could of"?
That's not a good example, because "could of" is often (ungrammatically) used instead of "could have". In such cases, "could of" is always wrong.
It is possible to encounter "could of", for example:
He could of necessity resort to that.
But that is not common at all.
He could, of necessity, resort to that.
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