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indiachinacook
1 year ago

Example 4 is incorrect: The man is masculine, so the relative pronoun must also stand in the masculine: It (better): The) is the man, the Son with my daughter in the School goes. The preposition in requires the battery because it is a directional indication.

AlexSchweitzer
1 year ago
Reply to  indiachinacook

Go to school.

indiachinacook
1 year ago
Reply to  AlexSchweitzer

Thank you, sometimes I’m blind.

AlexSchweitzer
1 year ago

This hasn’t been noticed yet. All right

AuchKarma
1 year ago

4. It’s the man, the Son with my daughter at school.

Five. I’d like to come to your school for a talk.

If you write “they” big, it has a different meaning than when you write it small. I don’t know if it’s right here because I don’t know the context. When it comes to a direct statement to the principal, “your” (big written) would be right. When you write “her” small, it refers to the school in relation to a student.

PlacidDocu
1 year ago

I would say 1-3 are great,

the 4 I find something confusing. “It’s the man,” the rest of it describes exactly what man is meant, but what is the man now?
If you were to interpret the man at the moment, you would probably say more “This is the man, the Son with my daughter goes to school”

And at the 5 I would only write “the” instead of “your”.
I might want to use your school with the head of the school, but even in doing so, I could get weird.

PlacidDocu
1 year ago
Reply to  ichich777

“to one” or “to”, as you like better 🙂

MaxMusterman353
1 year ago

Five. “Your” is written when you mean it!

4. “Your” son, not “they,” please! And to school, not the one if you think they’re going to school.

Ghostwriter2
1 year ago

2) Actually sa jacket (the girls), but I would also her coat say.

4) … the man whose son …

5) Better: …to a conversation …

Aveairam
1 year ago
  1. It’s the man whose son…