@Man_From_India I don't know if you know about the other ELL room. People sometimes hang out there. I tell you this just in cast you didn't know about it. (I think I will stay 70% of the time here 30% there, but probably mostly both.) In any case, you're mostly welcome in both rooms.
1) Lately, Tanya _____ a little tired. a. has been feeling; b. has felt; c. felt
2) The Mauna Loa volcano in Hawaii _______ 16 times since 1900. a. has been erupting; b. has erupted; c. erupted
3) The Smiths recently ______ from their trip to Russia. a. have been returning; b. returned; c. have returned
4) Paul ________ for a promotion for the past year. a. asked; b. has asked; c. has been asking
5) Since the last poll, the President’s approval ratings _____ yet again. a. dropped; b. have been dropping; c. have dropped
Welcome back @oerkelens! In case you may wonder that there are two rooms, the Cabin is a public room. I created this gallery a couple weeks ago. The other room is more like the old room you used to be in. You're welcome here too if you want to discuss language stuff. Though it's your choice. :-)
(Meaning, you can chat there, here, or both, or none. Up to you. ;-)
Near-native, I'm Dutch, married to a Greek teacher of English, and I have been speaking more English than Dutch in my everyday life for the last 15+ years
@DamkerngT. Kind of. First time in Sri Lanka, and since we don't drive, we figured a personal guide was a good idea to see a lot of sights - and we did :)
@M.A.Ramezani :D Local English, more like. After some days it was easy enough to follow, but it was confusing at first.
@M.A.Ramezani I once almost got into an online fight because someone said Turks were Arabs, and I said they were Mongols. He took Mongol as an insult :P
My language is Persian and I think we have a tense which is absent in English, or maybe I am wrong.
In a conversation I wrote this sentence
Then you mean it is not important that I be the first one having to have a mere idea that earth revolves around the sun and I should someway prove it!...
I remember it was a big hurdle for me to overcome the fact that such thing doesn't exist in English, and I think his sentence is the most logical sentence possible.
> Has been painting is the present perfect continuous. We are thinking of the activity. It does not matter whether it has been finished or not. In this example, the activity (painting the bedroom) has not been finished.
> She has painted her bedroom.
> Has painted is the present perfect simple. Here, the important thing is that something has been finished. Has painted is a completed action. We are interested in the result of the activity (the painted bedroom), not the activity itself.
I guess it has to do with the fact that knowing something is a state. You can't say I have been knowing her for years (again, unless you mean the biblical sense)
When some answer's got more than 3 upvotes in less than an hour on ELL, you can be sure that it's become a HNQ.
@M.A.Ramezani Nice!
Looks like something worth noting:
(1) "It is not important that you BE the first one" — We don't know if you will be the first one, but this is not important. (2) "It is not important that you ARE the first one" — You are the first one, and it is not important. (3) "It WOULD NOT BE important if you WERE the first one." — You are not the first one, but this is not important. — Douglas McClure10 mins ago
Although postpositive is basically correct (this non-finite clause is an internal post-head modifier in noun phrase structure, and postpositive literally means "positioned after"), it might be somewhat confusing in this case. Why? Because postpositive is usually used to describe (the post-head modifier function of) adjective phrases. — snailboat8 hours ago
> 0:05 Hey, I'm Cailin O'Neil from Travel Yourself and I'm here today with my Newfoundland friend, Candice Walsh of Candice Does the World, and Canadian and comedian actor, Mark Critch. Hello. Today we're here for our Newfoundland language lessons.
Part 1: General Conversation 0:22 Ca'ce, for you hav'a d'okie? Not much, why(where?) were you at(asking)? Oh, not much, those can go'l'the way down a'bout week'n'wah. (hehe) How's your fath'n how's your mother? You know, I've by husters(?). Deadly week'n alligator (altogether?).
My mother tongue is spanish and during the university almost all my english professors were from England, after several years studying English as a Second Language (ESL) I ended up with a strange (and sometimes funny) spanish/british accent that I don't like that much.
I don't like it very much ...
Traditionally, the political playing field is divided in a left and a right side.
What each side means changes over time and between countries, but in general, right is conservative, left is progressive. That is a gross over-simplification, though.
Socialism has traditionally been placed on the...
> What each side means changes over time and between countries, but in general, right is conservative, left is progressive.
+1 anyway, though.
Or maybe I misunderstand the terms "progressive" and "conservative".
Oh, I see. Based on French politics in the old days. The conservative (the rich) were on the right wing. The progressive were the poor.
It's confusing for me because there are the new left and the new right.
Here is the quote from Friedrich Nietzsche:
He who has a why to live for can bear almost any how.
I don't quite understand it, especially this phrase almost any how. Can somebody please shed light onto the meaning?