What is the grammatically correct form of this sentence?
…and am now looking for a new challenge that will give me the opportunity to further develop my knowledge and skills.
Shouldn't there be "die" after the comma instead of "der"?
Thanks
…and am now looking for a new challenge that will give me the opportunity to further develop my knowledge and skills.
Shouldn't there be "die" after the comma instead of "der"?
Thanks
I want to put my contact lenses in for the second time. Do I need to clean them in saline solution (multifunctional solution) first? Or should I just put them in?
In school, we were taught to only use one tense in a text: either the past tense or the present tense. But if you're writing a newspaper article where you're talking about the past but certain actions are still ongoing, then you can use both tenses, right? Example: Peter robbed a bank with a hot-air…
What impact has Shakespeare had on language
Help with nominal style Verbal style: When the party was just over? Now nominal style: ….
Yes, if you want to formulate it this way, then “the” – refers to “the challenge”…
Yeah, there’s gotta be them.
Sure. the Challenge.
and now seek a new challenge, the I have the opportunity to further develop my knowledge and skills.
Would it probably so formulate
“the one who, that” as a relative pronoun, always sound better than “what, which one.”
So don’t re-form!
I actually find what/e/es more and more pleasant to read, therefore the answer. But without shaping of course “the”.
I always feel it as cumbersome and somewhat antique.
Exactly!
Yes, the challenge.
“the” is right.