I've got one sentence and I am not sure about correct form of enjoy. Here is it:
One of my most enjoyable hobbies is playing a musical
instrument.
Should there be enjoyable or enjoyous? If enjoyous then could you provide an explanation?
Thanks for answers!
Ahh... the user ell.stackexchange.com/users/7965/vickyace is doing rather well on EL&U, but his top network posts seem to be all about words and phrases. None is about grammar.
Words and phrases in a second language are easier to pick up, I think.
What is called the "subjunctive" or the "present subjunctive" is in fact just a simple untensed variant of normally tensed that-complement clauses.
Unlike real subjunctive systems in languages like German or Spanish, this construction appears
- only in subordinate complement clauses,
never ...
I meant to say "inaccuracy in nomenclature shouldn't prevent us from answering it if it satisfies other criteria". However, JavaLatte answered the question in their first comment, rendering it unsalvageable because the enquirer now knows the answer – pretending to still have doubts about it would simply be... chucklesome.
And someone agreed with the comment I linked above. (:
The tracking system status is:
Delivery has been dispatched from change of destination office
How should I understand it?
"Delivery" - staff that is delivered (parcel, package)
"has been dispatched from change of" - ??? (so mane prepositions), is "dispatch" = "send" (but here is "dispatch...
Does it mean "Because millions of baby boomers are the main buyers of these old cars, and now they have financial problems leading to there will be fewer buyers for these ones"? OR "Because millions of baby boomers WERE the main buyers of these old cars, and now they have financial problems leadi...
Hm, I think their second explanation is closer to what I believe the article depicts as the current state of affairs — however, my interpretation is at odds with the enquirer's.
The headwinds the paragraph mentions refer to an uncertain health insurance landscape which affects the prospective buyers – in this case, baby boomers. Due to possible financial risks, they're not willing to contend the price, leading to its decrease.
Because we're talking about auctions, less contenders corresponds to overall lower final prices, innit?
However, ugh... it's not a matter of are vs. were: baby boomers are natural buyers, but they might as well have been described as ex ones, because according to the article, they aren't anymore.
@user178049 In a manner. The answer is probably going to be: "It usually means that, but there're either no hard-and-fast rules, or there're too many rules."
"It takes x to y" is extremely common, and I'm surprised that you haven't met it before. It is certainly not confined to light-bulb jokes! It means "x is necessary in order to y." Here are some examples:
It takes courage to do what you did.
It takes a lot to rattle her.
It takes at least a week ...
My flags keep to be declined(( I feel sad. I would stop flagging for a time. But I wonder why is so, and in which case it is good to raise a flag. Thanks.
@M.A.R. I always flag "Thanks!" type of comments. But I remember flagging a comment that just didn't seem appropriate for the site. Let me see if it's still there.
@Alex there's also Meta Stack Exchange which is full of resources to read. Don't ask though . . . It's a bit harsh to new users. Just search, and read.
I understand if the post is abusive or spam, then if it accumulates 3 flags, it will be closed and removed from the main page, and in case of 6 flags it will be automatically removed (deleted). But what's in the case of extreme off-topic? Does an off-topic question need to accumulate 3 or 6 flags to be put on-hold or closed?..
Let's say I want to combine the two clauses below into one sentence using the coordinating conjunction 'and'.
1) I am 48
2) I am trying to get pregnant
Which of the following is the correct /most natural way to do it and why?
I am 48 and trying to get pregnant.
I am 48 and am trying to get p...
@M.A.R. Well, even discounting a bad word, it's a personal opinion featuring a falsehood, based on what the media report. At any rate, I don't see how personal opinions on such matters aren't immaterial on this type of site.
@Alex89 BTW, there are close votes, which you will be able to cast when you reach 3,000 rep and which have their own review queue. If 5 users vote to close a question, it becomes on-hold or closed. You, as a lower rep user, can flag things for closure, and that would make them enter the review queue, but it won't count as one of those 5 people voting.
@userr2684291 So purely because it's a personal opinion? There are an awful lot of similar opinions being posted as comments everyday.
The idea is that comments are ephemeral and would be removed some day, but you need stronger justification to flag a comment
Just like you need a strong enough justification for a less than 2k edit
You're badgering reviewers to review the edit, so it should be substantial. You're also badgering a mod by flagging, which is the very reason some flags get declined.
For instance, imagine a rude/abusive flag on an NAA. It would get declined. Why?
Oh, thanks. M.A.R. At our site things are simpler. There are 15 moderators, and only they can close or delete questions (although we do have flags). But any moderator can close a question, and we close duplicates only.
Shrug if you'd flagged that comment as ''too chatty'' on Chem, it might have been marked as helpful. But there's this mindset on ELL that comments with some content are worth keeping
One reason I have the most rep among my accounts on this site but I don't have a Marshal badge.
@user178049 I think it's an okay-to-meh question, even if the enquirer doesn't know how to pose it in terms of grammar topics it's, in essence, enquiring about.
Even though every once in a while it comes up on meta that people are closing questions as proofreading while they're not proofreading I still often see proofreading close votes on questions which are clearly "limited to an area of concern", hence per definition, on-topic in that regard.
This, o...
I have no idea how to do this, its due tonight at 12... Thanks!
The final step in manufacture of pure platinum (for use in automobile catalytic converters and other purposes) is the decomposition reaction of (NH4)2PtCl6. In addition to the solid metal, the following gaseous byproducts are also f...
Even though every once in a while it comes up on meta that people are closing questions as proofreading while they're not proofreading I still often see proofreading close votes on questions which are clearly "limited to an area of concern", hence per definition, on-topic in that regard.
This, o...
I am currently working on a letter and I wrote a sentence similar to this:
I created my own goals, which, together with my studies in mathematics, has given me an excellent foundation for this program.
I believe this is a correct sentence, but my friend claims it has a plural subject. I bel...
I posted a status
Got committed
My friend commented
It happens every month
I replied
No it doesnt
If it did
I wont have posted for the first time
Is my reply grammatical?
You're asking a question about the subjunctive mood in English, Yay!
First, let's frame the topic.
"In English, the subjunctive mood is used to explore conditional or imaginary situations. It can be tricky to use, which partially explains why many speakers and writers forgo it. But it’s quite u...
@DamkerngT. TRomano's answer might be confusing as well. They start with It would be very unusual (in contemporary English) to use "Would I had ...", and then continue with Normally we'd say (in eye-dialect): "If I woulda hadda gun..."
With their first sentence (I didn't quote it in full) they imply that the form "If I had..." is correct – but why add this, what seems to be an utterance made by an uneducated speaker.
@userr2684291 I think they've read some rules, which might've already too generalized, or maybe they generalized the rules more than their sources intended.
@userr2684291 Hmm... I think TRomano's answer is pretty good. I wonder if we can avoid confusion completely, considering that it's a confusing question. (BTW, If I had ... is indeed correct, isn't it?!)
> It would be very unusual (in contemporary English) to use "Would I had ..." or "Would I have had ..." to mean "If I had..." or "If I had had..."
What's unusual is trying to use Would I had ... to mean it.
Ah, yes! If I had to guess why he included that, I guess because he saw the question a bit contriving, so he tried to cover all the possible combinations of these patterns! :D
Maybe ELL makes him think this way. :P
Some of our users seem to fond of this kind of question, i.e., given a usual pattern, they will try to twist it into all possible combinations, whether they've heard the results or not.
I call this kind of learning "hacking the language".
@DamkerngT. There aren't any discernible paragraph boundaries in his answer, to be honest, and the gist of the answer is contained in these two words: "to mean", from which you can infer that "If I had (had)" is the correct form.