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بارك الله فيك يامستر مصطفى
من اجل تنظيم العمل هناك موضوع اسمه ركن النقاش مخصص لكل الاسئله المتعلقه بالمنهج ارجو ان تضع اى سؤال بعد ذلك فى هذا الركن فالكل يتعاون من اجل تنظيم العمل داخل المنتدى وجزاكم الله خيرا |
note
؟..............Why didn't he stop |
Why didn't he let you go? but we say: why did your father not let you go فى حالة الاسم نضع not بعد الاسم يوسف عبد العاطى |
Both are correct
The contracted form of the helping verbs : isn't , wasn't , hasn't , haven't , hadn't, don't, ...etc is a single word and must precede the subject in the interrogative form While is not , was not , has not , have not, had not, do not, ....etc. are two seperate words. Each pair of words is formed of : positive helping verb + not "an adverb to form a negative phrase) You are only allowed to take the helping verb before the subject and leave the adverb "not" in its place This also occurs in the fomation of the question tag She has posted all the letters, hasn't she? She has posted all the letters, has she not? The second sentence is grammatically correct, however it is rare to use as the question tag is a spoken form and contracted forms are preferred in spoken English |
Good question and fantastic answer. May Allah bless you
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اقتباس:
..............outstanding .......really outstanding I entirely agree with you |
أشكر الجميع على الاجابات القيمة خاصة مستر H0riz0n و أنتظروا أولى مشاركاتى و التى ستكون ان شاء الله رائعة جدا
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Give me an answere to
(i haven't seen him (lately -recently*
:friendsxs3: what is the difference between lately and recently |
The difference is in register. 'lately' is the most commonly used. 'recently' is much used, and only slightly more formal. 'of late' is hardly ever used. To me it seems very formal and old-fashioned. In an everyday conversation, the speaker who uses 'of late' might be considered pretentious by his conversation partners.
Hope that helped. |
lately is used with negative
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Activities and periodic action (particularly in one of the perfect tenses, including perfect progressives) go better with "lately". Punctual events go better with "recently". In fact, in a sort of impressionistic way, "lately" is imperfective and "recently" is perfective. Hence, "lately" usually means "within the most recent period".
Neither goes with the present tense very well. He coughs lately. http://www.englishforums.com/emoticons/emotion-7.gif Recently she is studying more than usual. http://www.englishforums.com/emoticons/emotion-7.gif In the simple past, it's "recently". He returned from Europe recently. [NOT "lately"] He recently won an award for poetry. [NOT "lately"] I recently lived in Dallas. [NOT "lately"] In the present perfect, it's either one, depending whether an activity or event is the focus, the progressive tense focusing on the activity. I have recently read "Romeo and Juliet". I have been reading "Romeo and Juliet" lately. (or "recently") All in all, the most typical uses are Past + recently and Present Perfect Progressive + lately. I'm sure there are other patterns that my quick brain sort may have missed, but that's why we have lots of moderators! |
سؤال دقيق جدا جدا .....ارجو المساعده
ما الفرق بين
do good و make good ارجو المساعده من اساتذة المنتدى |
اقتباس:
make good o become successful and rich after being poor - used especially in newspapers: a country boy who made good in New York do good : to perform / act perfectly do good : to benefit / to help / to profit واضيف للاخوة معلومة اخرى make lunch : to prepare / cook lunch do lunch : to have lunch |
May Allah Bless You for This Wonderful Piece of information |
شكرا يا مستر
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