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-   -   جمل احدثت دويا في الوسط اللغوي(للاساتذه فقط)...find the mistake (https://www.thanwya.com/vb/showthread.php?t=178411)

Mr. ayman 14-01-2010 01:52 AM

جمل احدثت دويا في الوسط اللغوي(للاساتذه فقط)...find the mistake
 
احبتي
اعلم اني من المقصريين بل ايما تقصير
فكم يطيب لي الاشياق ويحنو مني كل تواق
رحبتم بالصرح وزاد علمكم علما
كنت اشارك يوما في الاختبار التمهيدي الذي اعد لاوائل الطلبه
هنالك حدث دوي وجدل كبير حول عدد من الجمل المتعلقة بالمنهج الحديث
اردت ان اطرها علي اغزائي الطلبه وليتناقش فيها كلنا
اطرحها عليكم
find the mistake
by the time leaving the party,he insulted all the attenndants
he is richer than me

choose
the dinner ............ by mom for 2 hours now
has been cooked
has been being cooked
is in the action of being cooked
is being cooked

regards
Mr. Ayman
Abu Lamis:022yb4:

Samy Farid Mekhael 14-01-2010 06:43 AM

Before leaving............................ . .g
The second sentence is right
Has been cooked

sobhy ragab 14-01-2010 05:37 PM

by the time he left the party, ................

امير بحر 14-01-2010 05:56 PM

before
رايتها مره بهذا الشكل more rich
has been cooked

mr_moh55555 14-01-2010 08:07 PM

كالعادة ياريت مصدر الجمل....

SA3EEDY 14-01-2010 08:55 PM

thaaaaaaaaaaaanks

alien2 14-01-2010 10:28 PM

ارجو التركيز فيما يفيد الطلاب فقط ولا داعى لتضييع الوقت فى كلام فارغ

mohammad almashad 14-01-2010 11:12 PM

is being cooked
الجملة فى حالة المجهول

Nancy5 14-01-2010 11:16 PM

بصراحة أنا أتعقدت بجد

Mr. ayman 16-01-2010 11:06 PM

ليكن حوارك ارق
 
اقتباس:

المشاركة الأصلية كتبت بواسطة alien2 (المشاركة 1886471)
ارجو التركيز فيما يفيد الطلاب فقط ولا داعى لتضييع الوقت فى كلام فارغ


ايها الحبيب
اخلرتك ان تلك الجمل جاءت في اختار تمهيدي
لذا
امسك عليك لسانك
فان كنت معلما حقا... اجب وشارك برايك
وان لم تكن.... تنحي جانبا واترك الامر لاهله
فقط اردت الرد
مستر/ ايمن الصباغ
غلوم المستقبل الدوليه للغات
مدير مركز highlight للغات والترجمه
عضو الجمعيه الدوليه للمترجمين العرب

Mr. ayman 16-01-2010 11:15 PM

اقتباس:

المشاركة الأصلية كتبت بواسطة Samy Farid Mekhael (المشاركة 1884329)
Before leaving............................ . .g
The second sentence is right
Has been cooked

اذا متي تختلف before عن by the time
الا نقوم بشرحهما كحد سواء
لذا
اخي الحبيب
لا يجوز استخدام لاغ by the time - as soon as كحروف جر
before i studied, i
before studying, i

but

by the time i studied, i
by the time studying, i ............. X
reference:
A tit for tat preview of grammar
first edition- By Bufferlet S Blain. page 128
regards

secret enemy 17-01-2010 12:48 AM

find the mistake
1-When leaving the party,he insulted all the attendants
2-he is richer than I

choose
the dinner ............ by mom for 2 hours now
has been cooked
has been being cooked
is in the action of being cooked
is being cooked

I miss you so much Mr Ayman.

secret enemy 17-01-2010 12:55 AM

Today's topic is which pronoun to use after the word "than, as in "Nobody is more excited about the issue than I!"Or is it "than me"?

I believe Ken Wilson sums it up best in The Columbia Guide to Standard American English (3):
Than is both a subordinating conjunction, as in She is wiser than I am, and a preposition, as in She is wiser than me.... Since the following verb am is often dropped or “understood,” we regularly hear than I and than me. Some commentators believe that the conjunction is currently more frequent than the preposition, but both are unquestionably Standard.
So remember, than he and than him are both defensible, but not all grammar mavens feel this way. Therefore, I would avoid the prepositional use in formal settings, such as a research paper or job interview.

secret enemy 17-01-2010 01:03 AM

this link is to clarify the point of treating ( than) as a preposition or as a subordinating conjunction
,

http://forum.wordreference.com/showthread.php?t=25090

secret enemy 17-01-2010 01:07 AM

Than I versus Than Me.

Than, as used in comparatives, has traditionally been considered a conjunction; as such, if you're comparing subjects, the pronouns after than should take the "subjective case." In other words, "He's taller than I," not "He's taller than me"; "She's smarter than he," not "She's smarter than him." If, on the other hand, you're comparing direct or indirect objects, the pronouns should be objective: "I've never worked with a more difficult client than him."

There are some advantages to this traditional state of affairs. If you observe this distinction, you can be more precise in some comparisons. Consider these two sentences:
  • He has more friends than I. (His total number of friends is higher than my total number of friends.)
  • He has more friends than me. (I'm not his only friend; he has others.)
The problem, though, is that in all but the most formal contexts, "than I" sounds stuffy, even unidiomatic. Most people, in most contexts, treat than as a preposition, and put all following pronouns in the objective case, whether the things being compared are subjects or objects. "He's taller than me" sounds more natural to most native English speakers.


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