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  1. 1. According to Cambridge, you use the phrase what/who/how to emphasize your surprise when asking a question. Here it doesn't mean an indirect question. So the first and second sentences under (A) and the third under (B) are grammatical. The first and second sentences are quite clear. As for the third sentence, when you put the beginning clause ...

  2. The word "you," when used in a sentence, is always used as "you are" rather than "you is". This happens regardless of whether the speaker is speaking to one person or many. Is "you are", when applied to a single person, an example of the numerous exceptions in the English language? Is there ever a situation where it is appropriate to use "you is"?

  3. You are is normally contracted to you're in speech, because English doesn't like two vowels without a consonant to separate them, and one of them gets deleted. Either you're or you are can be used; speaker's choice. The same thing applies to I'm, he's, she's, we're, and they're, among other contractions. It's just colloquial English, that's all.

  4. A. "You suck the liquid through a straw". to suck is to ' draw into the mouth by contracting the muscles of the lips and mouth to make a partial vacuum.'. Only in the USA has this meaning been mangled to indicate that something is bad. Interpreting it as a colloquialism, it is more generally assumed to be a reference to oral sex, and so by ...

  5. Feb 3, 2022 · Here, the short version of the question is: "You decided that, didn't you?" Adding the extra words would not change the structure, so you would say: "You decided she wasn't the right person for you, didn't you?" This form expresses that you expect the answer to be "yes." For rhetorical challenge questions, you use the same polarity.

  6. May 27, 2016 · You are being mean.-- They are doing something mean right now. You are being argumentative. - They are being argumentative right now. "You are" is what the targeted individual is in a broad, constant sense. You are silly.-- They aren't behaving in a silly way, they are a silly person. You are mean.-- They aren't being mean, they are a mean person.

  7. Jul 27, 2016 · 3. The idiomatically correct way to say it is "Congratulations to you too." English prepositions are very difficult to learn, because there are not a lot of rules and you mostly just have to learn every case separately. In general, if you can imagine yourself "sending" feelings like congratulations or thanks, the appropriate preposition is to.

  8. Nov 29, 2018 · Await, by itself, means wait for. Thus, awaiting means waiting for; for example, "a whole new life was awaiting him in the new job" will be reframed as "a whole new life was waiting for him in the new job". Other examples: 1. The cat awaits the mouse to come out of the hole. 2. We've been awaiting over an hour now.

  9. Aug 25, 2016 · 0. "Have you" when the word 'have' expresses a helping verb, (for example: I have made it.) we can make it question just by replacing 'have' before the subject (Have I made it?). And whole the rest sentence will remain same. In the sentence "I have made it" , 'made' is the main verb where 'have' is just helping it.

  10. Jun 9, 2015 · Have you had your lunch? My mind reads it as: Have you already eaten/consumed your lunch? While the second sentence. Did you have your lunch? Means the same thing, but the tense is slightly different. I read it as: Did you already eat your lunch? For your second set of questions, neither feel very good: Have you had this situation when you were ...

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