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A grammatically correct version of this sentence is: "All except John are tall." This sentence could also be expressed through different words. For example: "All other than John are tall." "All are tall apart from John."
shujkkk
Not necessarily. It will all depend on the statements A and B.
You have 3 flowers: one rose, one tulip, and one sunflower. If the word "all" meant more than one, some flowers would have to be three different kinds at once.
In simple terms all that it means that there are more solutions than you can count!If the equations are all linear, some possibilities are given below (some are equivalent statements):there are fewer equations than variablesthe matrix of coefficients is singularthe matrix of coefficients cannot be invertedone of the equations is a linear combination of the others
together they represent both
the stanzas are all of the same length
Movement is the correct answer
all answers are correct
all of the answers are correct for A+ students
c
owner's equity statement
It wouldn't be grammatically correct.
All are covalent bonds.
No it is not correct if English is related. The correct one would be, Everything except peter is rich.
If you are confused by sentences like this, reorder the words: All the boys have the right answer, except Dave.
A grammatically correct version of this sentence is: "All except John are tall." This sentence could also be expressed through different words. For example: "All other than John are tall." "All are tall apart from John."