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Mr.Lumen replaced a square window with a rectangular one. the new window is 3ft wider and 2ft higher that the square one. it has an area of 30ft2 . How long was aside of the original square window?
A+ x(x-6)=315
1044 sq. inches
the window pane
24 boys, 16 girls, which equals 40 students.
No. He sat by the window is correct. He sits by the window is the correct use of sit.
a window pain or you when you are standing next to it
'Dangling modifiers' or 'hanging participles' (or similar expressions) are phrases that are intended to describe another word or words in the same sentence, but are not grammatically linked to those words. For example: 'As your mother, you should show me more respect.' (This means that 'you' are 'your mother', which is impossible and not what the writer intended.) Some correct versions: 'As I am your mother, you should show me more respect.' 'As your mother, I want you to show me more respect.' 'As my son, you should show me more respect.' Another example: 'Looking out of the window, a blackbird landed on the bird table.' (This means that the blackbird was looking out of the window as it landed.) Some correct versions: 'While she was looking out of the window, a blackbird landed on the bird table.' 'Looking out of the window, she saw a blackbird land on the bird table.'
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one day I was just standing in front of a window the suddenly pellucidity through the window
Call the police.....
I had to think about this for a moment. Yes, it is correct if the underlying assumption is that the boy in fact broke the window, and he is not willing to admit it. If he did not break the window, it is probably better stated as "The boy denied breaking the window".
in the poem the highwayman, the girl is standing at the window - casement - and with her long hair open
He's standing outside your bedroom window right now...
She was standing in it. It would have been hard to miss.
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She saw a man standing there