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First, talking is an object, because the grammar stipulates the object:
1.Noun 2Pronoun 3Numeral 4Nominized adjectives 5Gerund 6Infinitive 7Composite structure 8Clause, and your first question is a gerund.
Second, the subject, the subject at the beginning is either a gerund (that is, the studying of your noun), or an infinitive to study
Thirdly, it depends on the tense at that time, if the sentence is in the past form, then use could, if it means the present, use can If you want to express it more politely, use could
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taking mobile phones to school...There must also be a verb (a predicate that serves as an object clause) after it. Here is the gerund (phrase) as the object clause subject.
studying gerund as the subject.
Can can can sometimes be replaced with could, which is a very euphemistic tone that has nothing to do with the tense.
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Upstairs, don't just look through the grammar book, taking to school and studying here are both subjects, of course, in the form of ing.
As for can and could, it depends on the sentence.
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taking mobile phones to school...The gerund phrase is the subject.
studying gerund as the subject.
Can be understandable in a complete sentence?
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This is your junior high school summer homework, right?
Do it yourself.
1)he likes walking home.
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intend itself is a verb, and generally according to English common sense, some verbs with ed d become the past form can be used as adjectives. Other examples are: marked, tested, etc.
test itself can be used as a verb or a name, and with the addition of the ing form it becomes the necessary name form in the sentence, because intended is an adjective that modifies a name.
Any risks is followed by a plural, singular depending on whether it is or are.
It makes no difference if you don't have a bar.
Changed to describe the step by step process for the way of testing the software
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Glad for your question!
The final translation reads: Robert Hayden's "Those Winter Sundays" expresses the author's regret for his attitude toward his father, Minshu, when he was younger.
Therefore, it can be seen that the incident of "the author's treatment of his father Yuhiro Hashi" happened in the past, and this incident did not have an impact on the present and did not continue until now, so we can only use the simple past tense of treat.
If you understand hope, thank you!
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time is tricky.Using anthropomorphic techniques, time is cunning.
it is difficult easy to do sth.
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1. Fixed collocation: heard + doing;
2. I think my son is doing something, so I use: was listening
Translation: One day, Gene and Hannah Bortnick heard a piano in their bedroom; They thought their three-year-old son, Ethan, was listening to a CD**. Then, they walked into the bedroom.
To their surprise, they found his son playing the piano on his toy piano.
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The first one is preceded by heard plus ing The second table is in the past continuous tense, so the general meaning is doing (not verbatim) is g and h One day they heard a ** sound in the room, and they thought it was their son listening to a CD, and to their surprise, he said that he was playing the piano by himself.
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ahh, 【what】a sandwich, he thought, as he sat down 【to eat】(eat).
Sentence meaning: Aha, what a tempting sandwich, he thought, when he sat down and started eating.
What leads the exclamation sentence here, showing appreciation for Sandwich.
He Thought is an insertion, which means "he thinks".
as leading temporal adverbial clause, [when、、、
The entire sentence can be replaced with:
as he sat down to eat,he tought,"ahh, what a good sandwich it is."
Happy with you!
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The preceded exclamation sentence feels like what a nice sandwich!The adjective is omitted, followed by the verb infinitive as a purpose adverbial.
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The previous one is an exclamation sentence, with what, the structure of an exclamation sentence is what+a an+adj+n, what is used as an exclamation noun, how+adj+a an
The back indicates that he sits down to eat, so uses to eat
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What a Sandwich is an exclamation that means what a sandwich!
The infinitive followed by to eat is the infinitive of the verb, the fit down is the verb phrase, and the infinitive (that is, to + the original verb) is added after it
It means to sit down and do something, and here it means to sit down and eat (sandwich).
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32: What is exclamation.
33: A sentence can only have one predicate, sat is the predicate, and the verb eat after it uses the infinitive.
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His refers to the speaker, according to the previous The Speaker is male, so it is his, you just need to figure out the gist of the short article.
It depends on the sentence structure, and there is no certain formula.
It's really hard to explain this, but it's better to ask the teacher to buy a practical guide to English grammar and take a look at viThe intransitive verb is not followed by the object sit downvtTransitive verbs with objects, such as seat oneself, but intransitive verbs without objects should be used passively. >>>More
As is a preposition here, meaning "to be".
Would like sth wants something. >>>More
Hello, her parents hoped she can marry into the nobility and enter the highest ranksHere ranks is the noun plural. >>>More
1. Non-predicate verbs as definite words; Because it refers to the events of 1938, it is not true; The modern participle is used as a definite to indicate the accompanying condition or initiative, which is not appropriate here, and therefore a is not true; Item b can be selected if it is who received, but who cannot be omitted; D term, to receive, indicates the subject-verb relationship between woman and receive, and there is no voice problem, so D is chosen >>>More