NinduChandurudu Posted July 16, 2017 Report Posted July 16, 2017 Class 1: Less is used for uncountable things and fewer is used for countable things Eg: He drinks less water & He drank fewer glasses of water than the other day. Water is not countable- so less. Glasses is countable so use few Quote
NinduChandurudu Posted July 16, 2017 Author Report Posted July 16, 2017 When to use comma before and Explanation: Use comma before and only if it joins two independent clauses? What is an independent clause? ... any sentence that stands on it own Eg: I waste my time on afdb everyday ( Independent) The dog is well trained ( Dependent - there is no verb) Case 1: I waste my time on adfb everyday, and on youtube on every weekday ( Here and joins two independent sentences that can stand on it own, so use comma before and) Case 2: The dog is well trained and good natured ( both the sentences cant stand on its own ..so no comma before and) Quote
rockyforu143 Posted July 16, 2017 Report Posted July 16, 2017 Db ki glamour classes kavali not grammar Quote
NinduChandurudu Posted July 16, 2017 Author Report Posted July 16, 2017 Just now, rockyforu143 said: Db ki glamour classes kavali not grammar nuvvu conduct chey classroom no 2 kaali Quote
rockyforu143 Posted July 16, 2017 Report Posted July 16, 2017 Just now, NinduChandurudu said: nuvvu conduct chey classroom no 2 kaali Coming soon Quote
NinduChandurudu Posted July 16, 2017 Author Report Posted July 16, 2017 Just now, rockyforu143 said: Coming soon ok staff room lo kaluddam mari Quote
rockyforu143 Posted July 16, 2017 Report Posted July 16, 2017 2 minutes ago, NinduChandurudu said: ok staff room lo kaluddam mari Quote
NinduChandurudu Posted July 16, 2017 Author Report Posted July 16, 2017 Whatever written after "and" should always refer to the noun nearest to it Eg: I ate a lot of food, packed my bag and then stopped eating more. ( Incorrect) I packed my bag, ate a lot food and then stopped eating more ( correct) Quote
NinduChandurudu Posted July 16, 2017 Author Report Posted July 16, 2017 Has is used for single nouns and Have for plural nouns Eg: Peter has a big d*ck. Peter and his friends have big d*cks. Quote
r2d2 Posted July 16, 2017 Report Posted July 16, 2017 15 minutes ago, NinduChandurudu said: that can stand on it own, that can stand on their own... Quote
NinduChandurudu Posted July 16, 2017 Author Report Posted July 16, 2017 Always compare things which are comparable Eg: Unlike @timmy's GIFS, @fake_Bezawada's aren't that funny( Incorrect) Unlike @timmy's GIFS, GIFS that of @fake_Bezawada aren't much fun. You can compare GIFS to a person, but GIFS should be compared to the same. Quote
NinduChandurudu Posted July 16, 2017 Author Report Posted July 16, 2017 4 minutes ago, r2d2 said: that can stand on their own... wrong bhaiyya...on its own is correct If its an animate object, then on their own is correct. Hen can stand on their own ( Correct) A chair can stand on its own ( Correct) Hen = animate Chair - Inanimate Quote
r2d2 Posted July 16, 2017 Report Posted July 16, 2017 7 minutes ago, NinduChandurudu said: wrong bhaiyya...on its own is correct If its an animate object, then on their own is correct. Hen can stand on their own ( Correct) A chair can stand on its own ( Correct) Hen = animate Chair - Inanimate If you have a plural noun, you should replace "its" with "their" both is plural animate/inanimate doesn't matter Quote
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