Making Sense of GrammarPearson Longman, 2004 - 399 σελίδες
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Σελίδα 60
... answer is required as in witness examinations , quiz questions , and examination answers : Did you leave the knife in the kitchen or the bathroom ? For two points , has a spider got six , eight or ten legs ? The or may be implicit , as ...
... answer is required as in witness examinations , quiz questions , and examination answers : Did you leave the knife in the kitchen or the bathroom ? For two points , has a spider got six , eight or ten legs ? The or may be implicit , as ...
Σελίδα 62
... answer is obvious . But the effect is stronger if the second sentence is turned into a question : Isn't the answer obvious ? Notice that if the rhetorical question is positive , it expects the answer ' no ' , and vice versa : Is that a ...
... answer is obvious . But the effect is stronger if the second sentence is turned into a question : Isn't the answer obvious ? Notice that if the rhetorical question is positive , it expects the answer ' no ' , and vice versa : Is that a ...
Σελίδα 63
... answer , but to make people do things . This happens when we use the interrogative structure to request , invite ... answer ' yes ' and a negative one the answer ' no ' . You've got the drinks ? [ ' yes ' ] You didn't bring your raincoat ...
... answer , but to make people do things . This happens when we use the interrogative structure to request , invite ... answer ' yes ' and a negative one the answer ' no ' . You've got the drinks ? [ ' yes ' ] You didn't bring your raincoat ...
Περιεχόμενα
Introduction | 6 |
Theory into practice | 10 |
Grammar and vocabulary | 16 |
Πνευματικά δικαιώματα | |
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academic writing action addressee adjectives adverbials advertising ambiguity American English answer appear asked auxiliaries auxiliary verbs avoid British English CALIFORNIA/SANTA CRUZ Charles Dickens clause element clause types clauses Chapter cleft sentence common conjunctions construction context contrast conversation convey coordination CRUZ The University direct direct object effect ellipsis English entity especially event example EXPLANATION express fiction finite clause focus formal function genitive going happened identify Jane John kind language leave main verb Mary meaning minor sentences modals nonfinite clause nonpersonal noun phrase nouns Chapter object omitted Oslo accords paragraph passive past tense person plural postmodifiers premodifiers present tense Pro-forms pronouns punctuation question refer relationship relative clause reporting clauses semantic sequence singular someone speaker speech structure style stylistic subjunctive subordinate clause talk University Library UNIVERSITY UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA/SANTA usage usually verb phrase vocative words