almost same
No, although is a subordinating conjunction. For the difference between conjunctions and adverbs, see Conjunctive adverbs on linguapress.com English grammar online
By learning correct grammar.
Your question is grammatically and idiomatically incorrect in many ways. First of all "grammar", the way you are using it, cannot take the indefinate article "a". It is idiomatic to say "Is [quote sentence here] correct grammar?" So it would appear that the phrase/ sentence you are asking about is "It does she clears your doubt." There are too many verbs and pronouns in this. Is the subject "it" or "she"? Is the verb "does" or "clears"? Either way, these are not verbs that can be used coherently with the object "doubt"--that is not a grammar problem but a usage problem. As a result it is impossible to get any meaning from this heap of words.
'excellently' NB In English Grammar , most adverbs end in '---ly'.
Any angular size between 0 and 90 degrees. An OBTUSE angle is one whose size is between 90 & 180 degrees. A REFLEX angle is one whose angle is between 180 & 360 degrees. NB To correct your English grammar . The question should read ' What size is an acute angle'. When the noun following the indefinite article 'a', begins with a vowel 'a,e,i,o,u'. then the indefinite article is 'an'. In this case it is 'an acute', NOT 'a acute'.
Grammar is the way a language combines its elements to make sense.
the " ' " "s" and the space
pronunciation are different. different meanings.
Descriptive grammar describes how language is actually used by speakers, focusing on patterns and rules that are observed in natural language. Prescriptive grammar, on the other hand, prescribes rules and norms for how language should be used based on perceived standards of correctness or appropriateness.
i do not think there is no difference because grammar is grammar the only difference in accent
Practical grammar focuses on how language is actually used in everyday communication, emphasizing spoken language and common structures. Theoretical grammar, on the other hand, is concerned with analyzing language structure and rules in a more abstract and formal manner, often for scholarly or pedagogical purposes.
Grammar. "Thine" is used before a word beginning with a vowel (like the difference between "a" and "an"). Shakespeare wrote "thine," of course. (Elizabethan grammar was a flexible thing, but not in this case.)
The regular expression for a context-free grammar that generates the keyword "keyword" is simply the word "keyword" itself.
a grammer school is posh and a comprehensive school isn't :)
i told you sounds much better than i had told you and its all about the grammar
There is no difference between modern and functional grammar. The grammar used in our modern language is all traditional. The distinction between modern and functional grammar rests more on how it was traditionally taught. In the past, for example, teachers would teach that a sentence could not end in a preposition, but this is not true. Communicative grammar refers more to a teaching strategy for ESL/Foreign language speakers. Instead of teaching grammar in a traditional method, listening, reading, speaking, and writing are implemented.
The first is correct grammar.