Your new exchange student (German) speaks English well.
The period typically goes after the closing parenthesis in American English.
The tense for the sentence "I am speaking English" is present continuous tense.
The sentence "Would I study English?" is an example of an interrogative sentence, as it is asking a question. It seeks information or confirmation about studying English.
It depends on the sentence. It can mean any of the following words: what, which, that, who, than.
Panaklong is Parenthesis in tagalog ;D
Actually it should look like this (cars, airplanes, trains, etc.). But if the sentence ends with an abbreviation, the single period will serve to end the sentence, as in cars, airplanes, trains, etc. You do not use double periods. You can, however, use a question mark or exclamation point after a period that ends a sentence. Were you talking about cars, airplanes, trains, etc.? If this looks unusual, it is because abbreviations, such as etc., are generally avoided at the ends of sentences.
The word parenthetical is an adjective in the English language. It is defined as related to or inserted as in parenthesis.
The thesis statement is located in the last sentence of the first paragraph. A thesis sentence describes the following main tpoics that you are going to write about. Hope this helped!
She makes some coffee.
The Swahili word "sana" means "very" in English. It is used to intensify the following word or phrase in a sentence.
it is in the active voice. <3 c: have fun with your english!
The Latin word 'quod' is translated into English as follows: 'what'; or 'which'. The pronunciation is the following; kwawd. The word functions in the ancient, classical Latin language as a relative conjunction. Thus, it introduces a clause that's the subject or object of a sentence, in the English equivalent sense of 'the fact that' or 'the point that'. Or it introduces a clause generally to the sentence, in the English equivalent sense of 'as to the fact that' or 'whereas'. Or it introduces a fresh sentence, in the English equivalent sense of 'and', 'but', or 'now'.