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Questions tagged [grammaticality]

This tag is for questions about whether something obeys the rules of grammar in English. The question must INCLUDE THE SPECIFIC GRAMMATICAL CONCERN. If your question is about grammar itself, please use the "grammar" tag.

0 votes
0 answers
24 views

When it comes to expressions of time, when we say all day, all morning, all evening, all week, this means the same thing as the whole day, the whole morning, etc. But my questions are: Can we also ...
Virender Bhardwaj's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
10 views

What is the correct sentence? We brewed neither coffee nor tea. We brewed neither coffee or tea.
Niksan's user avatar
  • 61
3 votes
2 answers
844 views

Husband and Wife are at home. Husband is going to point A and wife is going to point B later in the day. Wife asks After going to point A will you come to point B or will you go home? Husband claims ...
Akshay Anand's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
134 views

For instance, would it be more correct to say "In April 2024" or "In April of 2024"?
garnerstan's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
97 views

My original sentence was “There don’t need to be any “buts” or “even thoughs”.” Should I be using doesn’t or don’t? For context, I’m referring to when people use the terms “but” and “even though” in a ...
Malicee57's user avatar
6 votes
3 answers
649 views

I'm a climate scientist, so professionally invested in changes in temperature. When the air gets warmer then I say we're experiencing "increasing temperatures". Some others (often colleagues ...
Robbie Mallett's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
72 views

Which of these two phrases is grammatically correct and why? "as fast a reply as possible" "as fast of a reply as possible" The second phrase sounds perhaps a bit more natural to ...
tparker's user avatar
  • 1,253
4 votes
3 answers
833 views

It’s widely known that a superlative follows the definite article the. However, in the sentence shown in the title: The reading shows ___ highest speed of 120 km/h. I am not certain which should be ...
Leonel Hou's user avatar
0 votes
4 answers
327 views

Is it acceptable grammar to say "There is a fault evident on my car"? I'm talking about formal writing in a professional context, e.g. engineering reports. Whenever I come across a statement ...
Roger Spencer's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
118 views

I’m wondering if there are more non-animal examples of collective nouns? Like “a murder of crows”, but not referring to a group of animals. So far “a flight of stairs”, and “a fleet of ships” is all I ...
user705507's user avatar
4 votes
3 answers
404 views

I am following a Coursera course on something related to Large Language Models (LLMs). In the Module quiz, one question reads: An LLM is submitted a prompt that asks whether[...] This strikes me as ...
marts's user avatar
  • 163
0 votes
0 answers
99 views

In Exercise 8 of Chapter 3 of their A Student's Introduction to English Grammar, Huddleston and Pullum ask the reader the determine whether the highlighted verbs are auxiliary or lexical. The answers ...
Atom's user avatar
  • 175
1 vote
2 answers
90 views

Can I use tripled to describe “problems” multiplying? Ex: Considering his line of work tripled by wife's condition and raising his son alone, its sad he couldn’t get help.
Delfina's user avatar
  • 11
3 votes
1 answer
172 views

How would you add tag questions after imperative sentences like "Follow me" or "Let's eat something" or "Let him think"?
Alaaddin Serdar's user avatar
4 votes
1 answer
137 views

I often see the following type of sentences where the main clause in the passive voice is followed by a participle clause with a different subject. I wonder if these sentences are grammatically ...
Old-fashioned Writer's user avatar

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