|
Canada-0-MATTRESSES 公司名錄
|
公司新聞:
- When is to a preposition and when the infinitive marker?
In simple words, "to" is a preposition when followed by a noun and an infinitive-marker when followed by an infinitive
- Should the verb impact be always followed by on?
My question is, should it be always followed by the preposition on? Oxford Dictionaries gives the following example: The cuts will inevitably impact on service delivery I saw elsewhere this sentence: The author offers policies that unduly impact certain populations Is there any thumbrule for this?
- Is when a preposition? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
A coworker "corrected" me in front of my student saying that it did not need a comma, but my thought was that "when" is being used as a preposition My question is this: is the phrase "When I was three-years-old" a prepositional phrase? I looked at a number of prepositional word lists online and "when" does not appear on any of them
- Is there any real difference between to as a preposition and to as . . .
However, many grammarians do maintain that this analysis is imperfect If we accept that prepositions need a following noun group, before is readily classed as a preposition in the first sentence here and as an adverb in the second (compare he went abroad later) However, this isn't a complete explanation either In The ship hove to
- Prepositions in Relative Clauses: Placement Rules and Exceptions . . .
A prejudice against such deferred (or 'stranded') prepositions [2a] remains in formal English which, […] for relative clauses, offers the alternative of an initial preposition [2]
- Is now a preposition? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
The predicate structure of a preposition has one complement, which is most commonly a noun phrase, but can be an adjective phrase, a clause, another preposition phrase, and probably more in rare cases
- When is it appropriate to end a sentence in a preposition?
A preposition is a perfectly reasonable word to end a sentence with Admonitions against doing so are not something anyone needs pay heed to It's the kind of made-up rule that is not based on the reality of the language and anguish over doing it is something no writer need suffer from And if you don't believe me, look it up
- Whats the right preposition to use with the verb enroll?
The dictionary says that one enrolls in a university, but today I heard a person saying "The student enrolled at the school " Is it right? Can I use both the prepositions "in" and "at"?
|
|