@The_YUNiversity

The YUNiversity

Ask @The_YUNiversity

Sort by:

LatestTop

Previous

People you may like

MonaLisaFrowned’s Profile Photo Veronica
also likes
Cali0143’s Profile Photo Mami Kasey
also likes
BrokenxAngel’s Profile Photo - ℕeko
also likes
ugottafriend’s Profile Photo KB
also likes
Gr33dY’s Profile Photo Gr33dY
also likes
gabrielalovinca’s Profile Photo Gabriela Lovinca
also likes
TheAcidWords’s Profile Photo Jerry
also likes
collinduncan’s Profile Photo Collin Duncan
also likes
BasantHisham’s Profile Photo passant
also likes
mohdrsh’s Profile Photo M. Sheaban
also likes
sosssp’s Profile Photo Kashima Yukiya
also likes
ahmadalswabkeha’s Profile Photo Ahmad sh
also likes
sashakhan6’s Profile Photo ساشا خان
also likes
poetalunam’s Profile Photo leigh; ✨️
also likes
AndroidGirl15’s Profile Photo Danie
also likes
Areejflower’s Profile Photo ArEej
also likes
Want to make more friends? Try this: Tell us what you like and find people with the same interests. Try this: + add more interests + add your interests

when we can use rather? is it have a same meanings with prefer? i still confused with that word. can u give an example in sentences?

RATHER has two primary meanings: 1. by preference; 2. to some degree:
- Nan would RATHER sleep than mow the lawn.
- Henry would RATHER go to London on holiday than Pyongyang.
- Would you RATHER dance with me or buy me dinner?
- Peter is RATHER happy that it's Friday. ("Rather" = to a certain extent or degree)
- Nan has been acting RATHER funny today. ("Rather" = to a certain extent or degree)

When the morning broked in Sunday morning, I woke up and planned to jog around the neighborhood. Is that right?

pingkankamboja’s Profile PhotoPingkan
"Early Sunday morning, I woke up determined to jog around the neighborhood." ("When the morning broke" sounds way too formal.)
Liked by: pit

When should we use 's and s' ?

's is the possessive form for singular nouns: kid's toy, Mike's cat, car's engine; s' is the possessive form for plural nouns that end in -s: two cars' engines, three boys' books, six dogs', three trees' branches.
Keep in mind that for names that end in -s (James, Thomas, Chris, etc.), either James's or James' is fine.
Also, 's is a contraction of is or has, e.g., He's (he is) sick; She's (she has) been to Paris.

"It's no good" - is it colloquial or is it completely equal to "it's not good"? can we say "it's no fair" etc?

"It's no good" is colloquial. We usually use "It's no good" to mean "It's no use" (which is also colloquial). "It's no fair" doesn't work because nobody says it. "It's NOT fair" is fine.
Liked by: da roberto Ran

Next

Language: English