When you agree with someone/something, it means you accept the point of someone/something What are some grandiloquent, or simply better, ways of expressing an idea/thought suddenly came to me, or an idea/thought struck me, or i was struck by an idea/thought? Matt does not agree with my answer
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She - Rotten Tomatoes
Are he and she cognate
Sometimes people are referring to mechanical objects as she
She always gets the best service Are there any rules when it is appropriate to use she instead of it,. Upon answering the telephone, the person calling asks if joan is available If joan is the person who answered the phone, should she say this is her or this is she?
So as grammarians do you think the contracted form of she has should be she 's More importantly, are there rules for contracting words Say, if i wanted to express she was as a contraction could it also. Taken from the free online dictionary

She is the subject of the verb 'to be', so it must be 'is'
It was he who messed up everything It was him who messed up everything What is the difference between these two sentences? As colin mentions, in this context would implies a hypothetical situation, whereas will implies intention or (likely) prediction
So to take one of the examples If* you ever break up with your girlfriend, won't. If you're viewing it as something that happened after she was born, it should be came You probably want to avoid using too many verbs in the past perfect, like had come, so if this is just.

She has run from her responsibilities
Regarding the problem that arises when forming the past participle, some people mistakenly use the past tense ran instead of the correct past. I'm wondering where the phrase originates Who's 'she', the cat's mother (idiomatic, somewhat dated, britain, new england) a rebuke especially directed towards children for having.




