I don’t know nothing.” It’s a common cliché’ we hear today that we use and hear today. But is it really correct grammar? No, it isn’t. Avoid the double negative in your sentence. It should be, “I ...
“I’ll dress warm,” I wrote to friends recently in a group email about a get-together on the patio of a local café. What happened next will sound familiar to every careful user of the English language: ...
Lets break it down, starting with a simple phrase: Monkeys from Pisa bully deer from London. OK, admittedly its an implausible scenario, but its a grammatically fine sentence. In English we can use ...
Take a guess at what this sentence means – “Buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo.” It really has a proper meaning. And it’s part of a whole group of one-word sentences. The ...
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