Quote:
Originally Posted by Bureda
TIP: NEVER use 'and' or 'but' after a full stop. Remember a full step indicates a closer in a sentence, therfore your next work has to be a subject! not a Conjunction. Conjunctions are used to join/balance a sentence!
Don't Panic. It's similar to Japanese in many ways. You can say mother in many, many ways: 'Oka-san', 'Oka-chan', 'Ofkuro', 'Haha'. I do not know if I spelt those right, but Japanese focuses more on 'words' where as English focuses more on 'sentence'. We are governed by sentence making, whereas in Japanese you can say 1 word and it will make perfect sense.
See, you have the ability to do it! just have self confidence and patience. English is a lot to swallow.
Past, Present and Future is the most problematic part of learning for new people.
You need to focus in understanding sentence structure. The rest will come naturally!
When you're being descriptive you say it. When you're saying it casually you don't really need to say it.
It's not that easy! You can use 'he or she or they' AFTER you know the subject!
Here's some examples:
- Today I met this lovely person in JF Forums. The person sounded eager in understanding the English Language! (See I am using 'this/the person' because I do not know their identity - Very indirect!)
Here's another example:
- Today I met YuriTokoro in JF Forums. She sounded eager in understanding the English Language! (Do you see how it varies slightly!?)
You're confused because posters in this forum use the term He or She a lot. They simply 'guess' or 'generalise' ones identity from the way they are typing/personality.
I will send you a PM with some facts and games! After you get the results PM me back!
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Hi, Bureda.
What does TIP stand for?
Does ‘ your next work has to be a subject!’ mean ‘I have to write a subject right after a full stop’?
>When you're being descriptive you say it. When you're saying it casually you don't really need to say it
何かを記述するときにはthatを入れて、カジュアルに書 たり話したりするときはthatを入れない。I’ve got it!
What’s the difference between ‘When you're being descriptive you say it.’ and ‘When you’re describing.’?
Is the first one formal? Can I say the second one?
>Today I met this lovely person in JF Forums.
It sounds like the person is sitting next to you.
Why do you say ‘this’ instead of ‘a’?
>After you get the results PM me back!
I don’t understand this.
Does it mean “I’ll PM you back after I finish reading and understanding your PM?
What does “get the results” mean?