and the chipmunks road chip - Imagemakers
amisarebebeamisare
amisarebebeamisare
Are there any questions I should be asking? Is there any articles available on the subject? My instinct is that in the two questions above, it should be 'are' as the subjects of the sentences (
, he, she, it, Tom, Maryiswe, they, you Tom and Maryyouare
Understanding the Context
isamarebe 1am I am a student. 2are.
isare.
Only indirectly, to the extent that the issue of semantic override in time and money expressions applies only to countable nouns. I can't conceive of a sentence where an uncountable noun is followed by a.
I was just wondering, how can we differentiate "are you done?" and "have you done?", and what is the appropriate way to use each?
Key Insights
Whats the difference between these two alternatives: Are you going to England this summer? Will you go to England this summer?
1be *h1es- be indicativesubjunctive.
Both are used. Before the 1940s, "one or more are" was clearly more popular, but since then they seem roughly equally common.