Grammatically correct?
you say in the middle of the table I put the … . Or : in the middle of the table I put the …
you say in the middle of the table I put the … . Or : in the middle of the table I put the …
It's often used as a literary expression, but it's neither correct nor noble in this form. I always try to avoid it by somehow connecting it to the preceding sentence. However, I've now realized that this can lead to confusing statements. Are there any rules or recommendations?
What is the correct saying: a) He passed thousands of fans. b) He passed thousands of fans.
Hello gutefrage community! I'm writing a class test on poem analysis/interpretation on Monday. I'm in 9th grade at a high school, and we've always been doing love poetry (e.g., "Two Sails" by Ferdinand Meyer, "With Skin and Hair" by Ulla Hahn, "Lebe Wohlfahrt" by Chamisso, "Welcome and Farewell" by Goethe, etc.). Now let's get to…
I have to learn Prometheus for school, but I don't know how, where, or when to emphasize it best. Do you have any tips?
If you sit in the middle of the table and lay something down, you put something in the middle of the table.
If you stand at the edge of the table and put something in the middle of the table, you put it in the middle of the table.
In the middle of the table OHNE the “hin”
It was also “in the In the middle of the table I put… but then with “ab”.
Both would be grammatically correct.
I put that… into the middle of the table.