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  • grammar - Noun order: He and we. . . or We and he. . . ? Similarly . . .
    John and we got a lot of experience working on the project or That project's experience really benefited John and us Clearly, he is mentally separated from the others of us who were on the team, at least in this context, so I was just wondering if there were some grammatical conventions to govern this situation
  • Does hes mean both he is and he has? [closed]
    @mplungjan: But "he's an apple" can be mistaken for "he is an apple", while "he has an apple" might be intended This rule doesn't work generally, therefore it can hardly be called a rule
  • Which is recommended preferable between (s)he he she?
    Yes, both (s)he and he she are acceptable abbreviations for usage where space is at a premium and gender of a person is important s he is not a common abbreviation, and will confuse more users than the other two
  • word choice - He has yet to vs. he is yet to - English Language . . .
    He has yet to receive an appointment He is yet to receive an appointment Is there any difference in meaning? Is one more correct than the other?
  • What is he? vs Who is he? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    What is he? -- Does the question refer to what he is doing for a living? Who is he? -- Does it refer to his name? For example, he is Peter
  • word order - Why didnt he vs. Why did not he - English Language . . .
    1 1 - It is "Why did he not come to work?" 2 -The shortened form is "Why didn't he come to work?" This is something that confuses learners But almost everybody discovers by reading that in the long form (1) "did" and "not" don't stand together Everybody has to learn this except Germans who say it in the same way I mean the long form
  • Is using he for a gender-neutral third-person correct?
    I know there are different opinions on this issue My question: Is using "he" for a general, gender-neutral third person still in common use for formal writing? By common use I mean, can I expect my
  • He Isnt She Isnt V. S. Hes Not Shes Not [duplicate]
    No there is not Or no there's not :) Isn't is a contraction of "is not" He's she's is a contraction of "she is he is" They are just different ways of writing the same sentence
  • grammaticality - Whether or not vs. whether - English Language . . .
    As Henry Higgins observed in Pygmallion, the best grammarians are often those who learned English in school as immigrants My parents, who were first-generation Americans in the early 20th century, learned English grammar in NYC public schools meticulously They insisted "whether or not" is proper usage, period Over time, language evolves or erodes and the rules change, which really means
  • Why does he not? or Why does not he? and why? [duplicate]
    Why doesn't he? Now Why doesn't he? is just the contracted form of 2: Why does not he? Why doesn't he? So, given that 2 is essentially 3, I'd like to know firstly, which questions are grammatical and which are ungrammatical or awkward I'd like to also know why this is the case - assuming there is some absolute contrast between 2 and 3





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