Here are some examples (well there’s one already):
b3193156074has quotedlast year
Stationery/Stationary Paper and envelopes/Remain still
Канцеларијски материјал / стационарни папир и коверте / остају непомични
Davorhas quoted2 months ago
gap, ill, mire, reindeer, root, scowl, skull, sky, to mention a handful.
queenalexa0144has quoted5 months ago
Civilization is based on communication;
alexisjadealsadohas quoted8 months ago
tense tells us about the time of the action (now, in the past, in the future). The person refers to who is carrying out the action: first person singular (I); second person singular (you/thou); third person singular (he, she, it); first person plural (we); second person plural (you plural); and third person plural (they).
eveoemphas quoted8 months ago
This usage can add colour or humour to what a person is saying – but it has to be deliberate and discerning
eveoemphas quoted8 months ago
A two-tier language developed, with Norman French words being used by the ruling class, while their Anglo-Saxon equivalents were used by the natives
eveoemphas quoted8 months ago
Civilization is based on communication; faulty communication leads to misunderstanding and can impede progress. As the world has developed, so has language, and quite rightly
eveoemphas quoted8 months ago
The tense tells us about the time of the action (now, in the past, in the future). The person refers to who is carrying out the action:
eveoemphas quoted8 months ago
Most infinitives in other languages are one word, but English infinitives take a to before the verb – to be, to go. This is why it’s the only language that can split its infinitives – by inserting an adverb between to and the verb as in ‘to boldly go’– much to the dismay of some purists, who point out that although the infinitive is made up of two words, those two words represent a single idea