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New answer posted

4 months ago

0 Follower 1 View

P
Parul Sharma

Beginner-Level 5

To report questions, drop the question word order, if converting yes/no questions, invert using "if" or "whether," as well as changing the tense. Direct: "Are you ready?" asked Mia. Indirect: Mia asked if I was ready. The quotation marks are gone, and the sentence reports like a statement. For "wh-" questions, keep the "wh-" question word. Direct: "Where is it? Indirect: she asked where it was.

New answer posted

4 months ago

0 Follower 1 View

N
Nishtha Singh

Beginner-Level 5

Tenses tend to backshift in indirect speech; thus, present to past, past to past perfect. Direct: "I eat pizza," says Jack. Indirect: Jack said he had made pizza. This "backshift" is important as it indicates the action came before the speaker. Do not backshift tenses, however, with facts. For example, "the earth is round" remains "the earth is round."

New answer posted

4 months ago

0 Follower 3 Views

P
Piyush Dixit

Contributor-Level 10

To change a statement, just change the pronouns, change the tense (hence, “say” to “said, ” or “is” to “was”), and change the time words. E.g., direct: "I am tired," said Emma. Indirect: Emma said she was tired. Remove the quotation marks, use "that" to link the two sentences together, and position yourself in that of the author.

New answer posted

4 months ago

0 Follower 2 Views

R
Rashmi Singh

Contributor-Level 8

International students who wish to study at Bangor University must have an IELTS of 5.5  (with no component below 5.5) or equivalent to gain admission at the undergraduate level. For Bangor University admissions in a graduate program, applicants must have an IELTS score of 6.0 (with no component below 5.5).

Applicants who do not have an IELTS of 5.5 overall with a minimum of 5.5 in any component, will be offered a Pre-sessional English course to be studied immediately as per the program:

If your IELTS score is below 5.0 (with no component below 4.5), you will be offered a 6-week Pre-sessional Engli

...more

New answer posted

4 months ago

0 Follower 7 Views

P
Poornima Sharma

Contributor-Level 8

The future continuous tense is formed with "will be" followed by the -ing form of the main verb. Forgetting either "will" or "be" results in an incorrect sentence, according to Clapingo. The main verb in the future continuous tense must be in the present participle form (-ing). For example, "I will be eating" is correct, while "I will be eat" is incorrect. Read more error areas in the page above.

New answer posted

4 months ago

0 Follower 6 Views

P
Poornima Sharma

Contributor-Level 8

While the Future Continuous tense talks about the action that will happen in future at a given point of time, it is not used for actions that happen suddenly or are not ongoing. Also, the Future Continuous tense is not used for with stative verbs like want, need, etc. For example, I will finish the work on Friday. (sudden completion); I will be wanting to go to the school." (incorrect).

New answer posted

4 months ago

0 Follower 1 View

P
Poornima Sharma

Contributor-Level 8

For understanding and practicing the future continuous tense, books like "English Grammar in Use" by Raymond Murphy and "Practical English Usage" by Michael Swan are highly recommended. "Longman Dictionary of Language Teaching and Applied Linguistics" is also a good book to study Future Continuous Tense.

New answer posted

4 months ago

0 Follower 6 Views

P
Poornima Sharma

Contributor-Level 8

The basic structure is subject + will be + verb (present participle). It's used to describe an action that will be ongoing at a specific time in the future. Future Continuous Tense is not used for actions that will be finished by a specific future point.

New answer posted

4 months ago

0 Follower 4 Views

P
Poornima Sharma

Contributor-Level 8

The Future Continuous Tense talks about actions that will go on in the future as well. Also known as the Future Progressive Tense, this verb tense is the future version of the present continuous tense, which uses a similar construction. For example, “I will be watching a movie tonight.”

New answer posted

4 months ago

0 Follower 12 Views

R
Raushan Kumar

Contributor-Level 10

There no one answer for this. Like, TOEFL is better if you good with computer and like multiple choice question. IELTS maybe easier if you like pen paper test or want talk face-to-face. PTE all computer and give result fast sometimes. So which English proficiency test easiest, it always depend on you.

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