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9:43 AM
What is this part in particular?
What exactly am I supposed to follow.
Please assist me with the rules in all these sentences.
@Man_From_India @M.A.R. What is the topic about
?
 
@RajorshiKoyal in your first image it clearly states the rule.
 
I would like to refer to a standard textbook for thi
this*
Which book am I supposed to refer to?
@Man_From_India My instructor told that the last subject is an exception.
Can you assist me with this slightly?
 
10:15 AM
@RajorshiKoyal which sentence?
 
One should do _____ duty sincerely.
@Man_From_India
 
As for text book, please ask your teacher because that will be relevant for your exam. I however can but it won't help you at all.
Yes "one's" is correct.
 
Why is one's correct.
I have already asked but I want to supplement my list so I am asking you. Can you refer me a couple?
@Man_From_India ?
Why not his?
What is wrong with his?
 
"his" would be right if the subject was "he".
 
What would that be right?
Please explain this to me slightly?
@Man_From_India What are credit balances in cash credit account?
 
10:31 AM
@RajorshiKoyal those seems to be relevant to your exam in accounting I guess. And I simply don't know.
 
Btw what eid your teacher say when you asked her about "one's"?
 
She said it is an exception
That is all
 
10:48 AM
Exception to what?
Ask her. You guys should ask her.
Oh wait, she did write a comment under. She wrote "it doesn't take a pronoun form". Strange!!!!
 
11:17 AM
@Man_From_India What is the correct answer.
I wish to refer to Wren and MArtin
What I am supposed to look out for?
 
@RajorshiKoyal the answer is correct. But the explanation is not. Why did she write"exception". It's as I see a question not relevant to the topic being discussed.
 
Please give you explanation:-0
:-)
Which part in Grammar am I supposed to check this out?
 
You were discussing subject verb agreement, but suddenly if one asks a preposition related question there, isn't it a different question? And in that way it is an exception.
But if in that context someone writes "exception", one might expect that one is talking about"exception to the rule". But here it is not that. However I am sure your teacher did mean that - exception to the rule being discussed.
So you should ask her exception to what?
The explanation she wrote under is flawed. What is a pronoun form? What catagory (parts of speech) of words does have that form?
 
I cannot find this in Wren and Martin. What is the name of the chapter?
 
And what is "one" here, asking about not the function but the parts of speech? It's obvious that "one" at the start of tge sentence is a subject but that is the function, not the parts of speech.
I hardly remember Wren and Martin book, I think I read it in school long back.
In elementary level, I was taught about English grammar, when we had a English subject till class 10. Since then I never had any formal class in English language.
"one" is a pronoun here. And you should look for chapters where Pronouns are discussed.
 
11:38 AM
ok.
 
 
11 hours later…
10:29 PM
@EddieKal hi I am a little confused now about a sentence in an answer.
> it's common to use "get" + a verb in past participle form, even if talking about future event...
It's in the second paragraph of the following answer.
2
A: is the grammar correct: did you get vaccinated?

AstralbeeYou are right that a base verb should follow "did"... and it does. You have the verb 'get'. It's quite common to use 'get' + a verb in the past participle form, even if talking about a future event, for example "let's get started". Equally, you could ask "are you going to get vaccinated? It would...

The way that sentence is written it suggests to me it has not one meaning. In one reading it means "it's very common to use get + past participle form of verb even when we are talking about future events". In another reading it seems "it's very common to use get + past participle form of verb even though it (the verb form) is talking about future event".
I made some comments under his answer but I think it's only me who takes the double meaning of the sentence, when in fact it bears only one meaning. So I was double checking with another native speaker. So asking you :-)
 
10:59 PM
Hey all, could someone read a text from a novel and provide your suggestions ?
@RajorshiKoyal, could u read an small text and give your comments ?
 
11:58 PM
@EddieKal, what's the difference between and /?
 
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Bad keyword in answer, potentially bad ns for domain in answer (88): Any comment or any comments? Of or From? by Robert Charles on ell.SE
 

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