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Sentence fragment.
The priority rule is PEMDAS. If, however, you want an addition to be carried out before multiplication, you need to put the addition in parentheses. So, I am asked what is double the sum of our ages if my age is 10 and your age is 11? I want 2*(10 + 11) = 2*21 = 42 I do not want 2*10 + 11 = 20 +11 = 31
it means you have to make it double
He always misspelled the words commission and admission, forgetting that both have a double 's'.
No it is a double negative
Some will tell you that the double negative (didn't-- nothing) is wrong, but the truth is that the sentence is correct in certain contexts. There are some languages, French for example, where the double negative is an emphatic construction and not wrong. English is always growing and changing; perhaps the double negative will be considered formally correct one day.
It depends on the sentence to say whether it its grammatically correct. If someone were to say, for example, "I have no money." Yes, it would be correct. If someone were to say "No, I don't have no money." It would be incorrect because it is a double negative. A double negative is when in one sentence you would use the word "no", or a conjunction with no, as in "don't" or "won't" more than once without a proper comma in place. To correct the example sentence, one might say "No, i don't have any money." or "No, I haven't any money."
Use a double parentheses instead. EX. (( = [
The clause is an adverb.
"Are you referring to some girl in particular?" Note: Begin the sentence with a capital. Use double quotation marks, as the sentence is being spoken. Add a question mark, as the sentence is a query.
The answer is "double-checked"
The answer is "double-checked"
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Double Helix the structure of double coiled DNA
My friends and I went on double dates
A double bar line indicates the end of a section in music.