text de la -
English
A question for native speakers, pleashe HELP
- I have doubts which one of the phrases is correct?
- ”I`m always making mistakes when I study English” ”I`m always making mistakes when I`m studying English” What would you say?
- Thank you in advance
- Lesnik2021
January 2024
100% GOOD (1 votes)
Vă rog, ajutaţi la corectarea fiecărei propoziţii! -
English
Corectari și Comentarii
AI have a question for the English native speakers,; pleashe HELPAs a title, it was fine. Apart from the spelling of punctuation and the spelling of ”please”, all is correct. You don’t even have to mention ”English”. It’s implicit that ”native speakers” refers to those who speak English - the title is written in English!
”for the English native speakers” is used in some colloquial spoken dialects of American. ”the” does not get used in this context when introducing the idea of ”for English native speakers” - we don’t know which specific English native speaker you are referring to. Try using ”the” here when writing a SAT or GRE essay...
AI have a question for native speakers, pof the English language. Pleashe HELP!`malways makinge mistakes when I study English” ¶ile studying English."”I`m always making mistakes when I`m studying English”¶
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What would you say?
It’s still clear that you don’t understand the difference between a definite article such as ”the” and a referral like ”these”. As I had said before, both ”the” and ”these” are correct in the context given by the author - but with a change of meaning.
So, you have edited something which is correct to something else with a different meaning. You could have made the case that ”these” is more commonly used in this instance than ”the” - but you obviously didn’t.
Here’s your comment as it presently exists just in case it ”changes”:
”you provide the phrases, so use these, not the.”
Both ”these” and ”the” sound completely natural to me because both get used according to grammatical context and I have been significantly exposed to both.
Hint: you might want to actually understand the difference between a referral such as ”these” and a definite object like ”the”.