British English.
② Subject-aux inversion in yes/no questions &
tag questions
(5) a. Should I finish that book?
b. Rarely, if ever, will you see a performance
as good as that.
③ Repetition in retorts and tags
(6) You think he can’t do it? Well, he CAN!
④ Invariant form(no present or past tense)
(7) *He canned run a mile in almost four
minutes when he was younger.
form a phrasal verb, a single constituent. It does not form a phrasal constituent with the following NP a huge bill. This phrasal verb run up has an idiomatic meaning; to allow a bill, debt, etc. to reach a large total.
(3) (a) He obviously will appeal passionately for support.
(b) *He passionately will appeal obviously for support.
We could mention the distribution of adverbials in an
Form/Grammar
• ‘to’ infinitive : I have him a chance to live.
• Subjunctive mood: What would you do if you were the young man?
These two major grammatical features, in contrast to functional features dealt in function, are mainly practiced in reading comprehension and writing task. Since reading passages and writing task are mainly focused in exercising the usage of subjunctiv
form another prepositional phrasal respectively. Likewise, 'put up with' is also the same kind of the verb. In the sense, we can say ‘fed up with it’ and ‘put up with it’.
Like prepositional verbs, phrasal-prepositional verbs cannot be separated as a single constituent. Moreover, prepositional verbs can take pronominal objects, but phrasal verbs require non-pronominal objects. Phrasal ve
Thus, our team decided to study about cosmetic market in China. We found that foreign companies like L’Oreal, Procter & Gamble Co and Shiseido have large portion of the China’s cosmetics market share while Korean companies have little portion of that. However, Korean beauty products also have high quality and Chinese people are favorable to Korean products. In other words, it is hard to under