Use e.g. when you want to cite an example. For e.g.:(like this.) ----
A and an are indefinite articles. Use a before a word starting with a consonant eg A house, a boy, a girl. Use an before a word starting with a vowel eg an apple, an objective. But also use an before words of French origin starting with a silent h eg an hour, an hotel. See link for reference.
eg. These shoes are red
to use whomever in a scentance you have to be speaking of a person eg. whomever wrote this is in big trouble!
You can use zero (no ) article:1. Before plural nouns eg We're expecting visitors2 Before uncountable nouns eg The walls are made of stone3. Before names eg My sister's name is Rose (note countries)4. When referring to people and things in general eg I like dogs better than cats5. Before geographical names eg Asia, Japan, New Zealand. When talking about names that are plural we use the eg the Andes, the Philippines and when the country name has more than one part eg the United States of America, the Black Hills.
yclept meant named or called eg The miller was ycleptRichard
i have had a seizure : eg
if you wanted to use my you could say eg: give me back my video game. if you wanted to use mine you could say eg: hey that's mine
In countries that use the long scale (eg Europe): 18In countries that use the short scale (eg USA): 12
No, 'EG' as normally used in the English language is an abbreviation, and not suitable as a scrabble word.
It is used to mask unpleasant taste (eg. FeSO4), add colouring for aesthetics reasons (eg. methylene blue), and protect the drugs against water (eg. erotamine), oxygen (eg. riboflavine), and CO2 (eg. phenytoin sodium).
A and an are indefinite articles. Use a before a word starting with a consonant eg A house, a boy, a girl. Use an before a word starting with a vowel eg an apple, an objective. But also use an before words of French origin starting with a silent h eg an hour, an hotel. See link for reference.
It can be used to make potterys, eg
eg. These shoes are red
In countries that use the long scale (eg Europe): 12 In countries that use the short scale (eg USA): 9
"That" is used for essential or restrictive clauses that are necessary to the meaning of the sentence, while "which" is used for non-essential or non-restrictive clauses that provide additional information but are not crucial to the sentence's meaning. Examples: "I like the book that you recommended" (essential) and "The book, which was published last year, is a bestseller" (non-essential).
You use it on a Pokémon. Eg use it on Pikachu to evolve it into a Raichu.
you use ur hamstring when your playing football eg running kicking