Sunday, February 17, 2013
Composite sentences with future tenses
Here you can find many exercises on future tenses. I am also hereby
making a list of all the tenses and key words available. You can do
exercises 18 - 28, which deal with future tenses. Remember: we do not
use 'will' in the part of these sentences with the linking word.
Future tenses
Punctuation
Here
you can find a document on use the use of punctuation. Some of the
rules, e.g., the use of the colon, they present do not agree with the
rules in the Interinstitutional guide.
This is a topic we did not deal with comprehensively during the course, as it is to be covered in more detail in advanced writing courses.
This is a topic we did not deal with comprehensively during the course, as it is to be covered in more detail in advanced writing courses.
Present perfect vs. present pefect continuous
Parallelism
Compound nouns and possessives
Subject-Verb agreement
Semicolon, colon and lists
In Sections 2.5 - 2.10 of the English Style Guide
published by the Directorate-General for Translation, you can find
the rules on the use of colon and semicolon with the appropriate
hyperlinks for other relevant issues, such as lists.
You can hereby find more information on the use of colon and semicolon as well as providing lists as it is presented in the Interinstitutional Style Guide.
Here you can find a document on the use of semicolon and colon, including the use of the latter to introduce lists. The first rule on the use of colon in this document is at odds with what is said in the Commission's "English Style Guide" and the "Interinstitutional Style Guide".
Here you can find a quiz on the use of colon and semicolon with the key and explanations. In the explanation for the answer to question 21, you can find the capitalization rule in sentences after colon.
You can hereby find more information on the use of colon and semicolon as well as providing lists as it is presented in the Interinstitutional Style Guide.
Here you can find a document on the use of semicolon and colon, including the use of the latter to introduce lists. The first rule on the use of colon in this document is at odds with what is said in the Commission's "English Style Guide" and the "Interinstitutional Style Guide".
Here you can find a quiz on the use of colon and semicolon with the key and explanations. In the explanation for the answer to question 21, you can find the capitalization rule in sentences after colon.
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