Posted by Matthew on Monday, April 16, 2012 at 1:01pm.
do you say "talk about a topic of your choosing/or of your choice? You can say it either way, but the second is by far the more commonly used.,/b>
1) I
buy any butter, mum has just bought some. (Shall I include a colon instead of a comma?) You need a period or a semicolon in place of the comma.
2) OK
3) OK
4) OK
I phoned Mary last night, but she wasnt in.
5) He paid £200 for that shirt. It was a real rip-off. (I need a synonym).
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/rip-off
Let me know what you choose.
Complete with the present perfect, the present perfect continuous, or the past simple of the verbs in brackets.
1-3 = OK
4. I
.(send) John four emails last week, but he
(not reply) to any of them.
5-9 = OK
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