![]() |
New Hello - Second Year - Unit Two
1 مرفق
New Hello - Second Year - Unit Two |
بارك الله فيك
|
greaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa:abdoog8:aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaat
|
Thank you Mr. Essam. Your work is great as usual
|
Who knows most speaks least.
رائع استاذي الفاضل |
thanksssssssssssssssssssssssssss alooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooot
your work is excellent God bless youuuuuuuuuuuuuu |
many thanks for you
|
بارك الله فيك
|
great work indeed BUT
r u sure of these specifications and where are the questions on the reading passage ALSO , ,none of them takes a singular verb i think |
A great Work
.You are always great Mr. ESSAM . God bless you .
Many thanks |
Thanks
Thank you.. This is really great work and great effort.. We are waiting for the next units.. Go ahead |
Thank you for your remarks
اقتباس:
Dear Sir Thank you for your remarks Actually the specifications Mr. Sayed Siam has kindly made available on this forum do not contain any reference to questions on the reading texts As for your remark about NONE , the following may explain it In current English, none is always treated as a plural when it refers to persons. If we want to have the verb singular we must now use no one or nobody as the subject. The modern usage is seen in no one thinks he is clever, but none except his family know how stupid he really is. In speaking of things, none may still be treated as a singular, but it is more often treated as a plural. (A Dictionary of Contemporary American Usage by Bergen Evans and Cornelia Evans, Page 321) The pronoun none can be followed either by singular verb and singular pronouns, or by plural ones. Either is acceptable, although the plural tends to be more common. (The Oxford Guide to English Usage, Page 184) There's a lot of disagreement about this "none". "None" can be either singular or plural, depending on the meaning you intend and its context in the sentence. "None of the pie is left" is clearly singular. When "none" refers to a plural noun, a plural verb is more common ((Common Errors in English Usage by Paul Brians – Page 142)) None as the plural of no one is commonly found with a plural verb ((The Cambridge Guide to English Usage, Page 375) use a singular verb where possible but if the notion of plurality is present a plural verb has been optional since the OE period and in some circumstances is desirable. The type None of them have finished their essays is better than the clumsy . . . has finished his or her essay (The New Fowler's Modern English Usage, By R.W. Burchfield, Page 526) The following webpage may be useful |
جزاك الله خير علي هذا العمل الرائع
|
شكراااااااااااااااااااااااا
|
دا ايه الحلاوه دى يا ابنى
استاذ ورئيس قسم |
جميع الأوقات بتوقيت GMT +2. الساعة الآن 10:18 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.