copy and paste this google map to your website or blog!
Press copy button and paste into your blog or website.
(Please switch to 'HTML' mode when posting into your blog. Examples: WordPress Example, Blogger Example)
eye dialect - English Language Learners Stack Exchange I have seen the word "cause" in many music lyrics and usually is pronounced "kez" I curious what does this word mean? For example, here is a part of Taylor Swift's Bad Blood lyrics: Cause baby,
I learned vs I have learned when it comes to past experiences that . . . I'd say that if these 10 lessons still impact your present life, use present perfect, because they are relevant now I prefer the present perfect, because they are "life lessons" If you are thinking of the period in the past when you learnt these lessons, use past simple
I work vs I am working (Present Simple vs Present Continous) I have doubts when it comes to deciding if I should use the Present Simple or the Present Continous tense Below are the examples: I have worked for 4 companies so far Now I work I am working for X
I won Vs I have won - English Language Learners Stack Exchange I would like to talk about the use of the present perfect talking about life experience achievements In an interview, I would like to tell the interviewer that I have a life experience as winning
Is there any difference between I still work and Im still working? See this NGram comparing I still work there and I'm still working there Which used to be about equally common, but in recent decades Simple Present work has started to become far more likely But I suggest that if A and B were both "of a certain age", and A had said something like I retired a couple of years ago How about you?, B would be much more likely to reply I'm still working, not I
word usage - English Language Learners Stack Exchange For me: He has similar behavior with his friends = "similar" here is just an adjective and is not connected with the word "with" Just because I say "he has similar behaviour when he is with me", it doesn't mean there is a structure "similar when" "He has similar behavior to his friends = "similar to" is correct (his behaviour and his friends' behaviour are similar) He has similar behavior
word choice - For a second time or For the second time - English . . . My take on it (disregarding the actual meaning of the example sentences) is that for a second time just means 'again (after one previous occasion)' For the second time implies that the speaker knows from a future perspective how many times altogether the event happened, and that this was the second of them