i used to go there or i am used to go there, when do we use i used to and i AM used to
"I used to go there" = I went there in the past, but I don't go there anymore. Here's another example: "We used to be friends" = we were once friends, but we're not friends anymore."I am used to going there" = I am familiar with going there because I go there often. Here's another example: "Nan is used to hot weather because she lives in Los Angeles" = Nan is familiar with hot weather because she lives in Los Angeles, where it is often hot.
whats the different between "do you blablabla" and "are you blablabla" for question?
"Do you ...?" is asking about an action or activity:- Do you smoke? - Do you sing? - Do you worry about the future? - Do you listen to K-pop?"Are you ...?" is asking about a state of being:- Are you a smoker? - Are you a singer? - Are you worried about the future? - Are you familiar with K-pop?
which one is correct, "what for?" or "for what?" ?
"What for?" is an informal/slang way of saying "Why?"Henry: I took the car to the dealer this morning. Nan: What for? Henry: The engine was making funny noises."For what?" is used differently: For what purpose was the typewriter invented? For what violation was he suspended from school?
which one is right: 'blaming is easy' or 'blame is easy'?
"Blaming is easy" is right. "Blaming" is functioning as a gerund (a noun that looks like an -ing verb). It's like "Smoking is bad for you." ("Smoking" is a gerund.)
which is correct "what's the different?" or "what's the difference?" and explain about these and those please? thank you
"What's the DIFFERENCE?" is right.DIFFERENT is an adjective: Coke and Pepsi are DIFFERENT.DIFFERENCE is a noun: What is the DIFFERENCE between Coke and Pepsi?
Whenever you guys aren't sure what a word means or how to use it in a sentence, turn to http://www.vocabulary.com/dictionary; it provides the best explanations and a lot of usage examples.(⌒ ͜ʖ⌒)-b
If i want to use past tense, should i write the whole sentence in past tense too?? (the same thing for other tenses)
It depends:- It RAINED (past) yesterday, so I THINK (present) it is going to rain today too. - I CRIED (past) yesterday because I FELT (past) so bad. - We WENT (past) to the beach and SWAM (past) in the ocean. - Because he TOLD (past) me two lies yesterday, I TRUST (present) him less.For more on shifting tenses, read this: http://bit.ly/1FF1SFT ^^
i'm looking forward to see his performance in Eurovision ← is that right? help me :3
"I'm looking forward TO SEEING his performance on Eurovision" is right. ^^After "look forward," use TO + -ING:- She looked forward to meeting her favorite singer. - We look forward to spending a month in Hawaii.