You retweeted someting about a poem about Haiku by a robot?? I don't get the poem. Can you explain?
For reference, here is the haiku: https://twitter.com/kathrynschulz/status/556099965525975040Basically, a haiku is a poem that has three lines:Line 1: 5 syllables Line 2: 7 syllables Line 3: 5 syllablesLine 1: Seven hundred ten (5) Line 2: Seven hundred eleven (7) Line 3: Seven hundred twelve (5)It's quite clever.
(This will be last question we'll answer for the next few hours.)"Instead of answering more questions on ask.fm, Henry, Nan, and Peter will be driving to lunch while listening to Super Junior. Most likely, Nan will drink iced tea instead of coffee."
I heard my neighbour sneez or i heard my neighbour sneezED?
"I heard (that) my neighbor sneezed" = I heard (from someone) that my neighbor sneezed earlier."I heard my neighbor sneeze" = I was there when my neighbor sneezed, so I heard him.
Difference of has, have and had & if possible examples too. Thank you so much.
"Has" = singular (except for "I" and "you") present tense:- Jo has a dog. - Mike has a cat. - She has too much to do today."Have" = plural present tense:- We have three dogs. - They have six cats. - I have to go. - You have too much food."Had" = past tense for singular and plural:- We had three dogs, but they all ran away. - They had a lot of work to do yesterday. - I had to visit my grandmother last week.
"Means" is the singular (except for "I" and "you") present tense form: "Mendacious" MEANS "deceitful.""Mean" is the plural present tense form: Your words MEAN the world to me.
For sure i'd really love American english, do you know? Ben Bradshaw? He is teasching us in Malaysia. To know him really well you guys should check him out for his twitter @bencbradshaw ;)
We're glad to hear about the work he's doing for all of you awesome Malaysian friends ... He is following us on Twitter. ^_^(We just followed him.)
"ON Monday." (Also "ON Friday," "ON Thursday," "ON Friday," etc.)However, "Let's meet ON next Friday" is wrong; it should be "Let's meet next Friday" (w/o "on").