It isn't unnecessary. Unnecessary phrases fall out of use after a few years, but "go ahead" has been in use for many. Therefore it serves a purpose. It's purpose is to encourage, command, or direct someone. It can be used to "ok" someone's actions, for example: "May I sit here?" "Go ahead." It can also be used in a longer sentence, such as "Go ahead and find a place to sit." Other ways of saying the same thing are: Go for it, feel free, be my guest, or sure.
It depends--if your writing is not-so-formal, go ahead and use the phrase "France's..."If your writing is more formal than not-so-formal, use the phrase "...of France," unless your writing is riddled with too many prepositions already.
The term for using unnecessary words is "verbosity." It refers to the excessive and often redundant use of words in speech or writing, which can make communication less clear and concise.
Use "I" when it is the subject of a verb. At all other times, use "me."
Use "is" if the subject of the sentence is singular; use "are" if plural. "The fact that I ate after running *is* irrelevant. ("after running" is the prepositional phrase; "the fact" is the subject). The methods prisoners use to escape *are* manifold. ("to escape" is the prepositional phrase; "The methods" is the subject).
No, the phrase "had went" is grammatically incorrect. The correct form is "had gone," using the past participle of "go" after the auxiliary verb "had."
Most people use "unnecessary descriptors" because they believe they are necessary in some way. Before deciding that a descriptor is unnecessary, try thinking about how other people, with other backgrounds and focused on other concerns, might read them.
No, they use the phrase just as anyone would use it.
No, you do not typically use a comma after "despite." The word "despite" is a preposition that introduces a phrase, and a comma is usually unnecessary unless the sentence structure requires it for clarity or to separate clauses. For example, "Despite the rain, we went for a walk" uses a comma after the phrase, but not directly after "despite."
Bud is a phrase that country people use andBuddy is a phrase that black people say is a crack head.
There are many reasons why people use the phrase to write like an angel. The words could have touched them.
The phrase of "word of the day" means that there is a new word for each day for most people to learn. It is meant as a learning word for people to use & educate other people of its use.
"I find it unnecessary to ask such a simple question"
Gatsby continuously uses the phrase "Old Sport" to refer to the people he is talking to.
It depends--if your writing is not-so-formal, go ahead and use the phrase "France's..."If your writing is more formal than not-so-formal, use the phrase "...of France," unless your writing is riddled with too many prepositions already.
He objected this phrase because he believed that the correct phrase was "We the states," but that was incorrect because Who, but the people can delegate the power? And who, but the people have a right to form a new government and feel that it's not protecting their rights.
repetitive
chillax is not a proper phrase but use by people to cool someone