Wiki User
∙ 13y agoNehmen Sie den Hut ab, um Respekt zu zeigen. (formal)
Nimm den Hut ab, um Respekt zu zeigen. (informal)
Wiki User
∙ 13y agoYour phrase is correct if you remove the word "of" and leave everything else alone.
Move the word or the phrase closer to the words modified. If this is not possible, make separate sentences or remove the modifier completely.
In contemporary English, the phrase 'at one remove' simply means 'one step away from.' The phrase is typically used to denote conceptual rather than physical distance, but at times both are implicated; for example, when speaking of the historian whose account of an ancient historical event is 'at one remove' from an ancient account of the same event.
Not really. One doesn't clean an impurity, one removes it from something. So either "remove all impurities" or "clean (something) of impurities".
"Your sister Theresa, a college student, had a difficult time finding a job." You want to separate the phrase 'a college student' as an identifier. If you remove the phrase the sentence still makes sense.
It is not correct.
No. Each is your subject. Go is your verb. "Of his sisters" is a prepositional phrase. If you remove the prepositional phrase and throw it into the garbage can, the sentence would read: Each go to a different school. Proper English demands the sentence read: Each goes to a different school. Now lets fish the phrase out of the garbage can. Each of his sisters goes to a different school.
You have to remove or shoes as a sign of respect
It is to show respect and to feel humbled.
Remove.
remove, destroy, exterminate, etc.
Stand and remove hats to show respect