‘Must’ is used to express an obligation which the speaker agrees with: You must study all this weekend for an exam on Monday. ‘Have to’ is used to express an obligation which has been imposed by someone else: Question: Can you come out with me tomorrow? Answer: I’m sorry. I have to study all weekend. I’ve got an important exam on Monday. ‘Mustn’t’ means ‘not allowed to’: You mustn’t start writing
Filed under Learn Grammar by on Sep 9th, 2011. Comment.
that gives a comprehensive explanation of preposition like all the uses of to, in, out, off, on, at…. etc…
Filed under Grammar FAQ by on Sep 7th, 2011. 2 Comments.
Limitrophe was borrowed from French diplomacy as an elevated word for a boundary.
Source: World Wide Words updates
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This video is starting to introduce the nouns. It’s a start to making a complete sentence. Along with learning the gender of nouns, we will learn the pronouns that reflect those nouns. This is just the beginning to learning how to construct a complete sentence! We’re almost there!! deutsch german english conversation sentence learn teach school grammar
Filed under Learn Grammar by on Sep 4th, 2011. 1 Comment.
Taken from a Business English lesson teaching the present perfect and present perfect continuous tenses. The video includes grammar explanations and an exercise.
Filed under Learn Grammar by on Sep 3rd, 2011. 1 Comment.
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