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gramática inglésa
One compares. The other tells time. Mix them up, and suddenly your sentence starts walking around with its shoes on the wrong feet
+2
Sometimes English glues two words together, sometimes it keeps them apart, and apparently this is one of those relationships where the spacing really matters
They sound identical, which is very generous of English and absolutely unhelpful for everyone trying to spell like a functioning adult
A small typo can make a professional email look careless, awkward, or even embarrassing
They look almost identical, which is exactly how English likes to lure people into tiny disasters with full confidence
English already upgraded "good" to "better," so adding more on top of it is like putting a second steering wheel in the car
They both sound like they showed up to reduce something, but only one of them actually knows how to count
Went is the past tense of go. Gone is the past participle of go. That is the core difference, and it is why learners often confuse them
Three tiny words, three wildly different tasks, and just enough overlap to make perfectly intelligent people second-guess themselves
They look like grammar twins, but they do different jobs. Object? Subject?
These two questions are close, but not identical: One relates to ability while the other asks permission
They are both past forms of to be, but they are used with different subjects—and in some cases, were also appears in hypothetical or unreal situations
+3
Is the pronoun the subject of the sentence, or is it the object? That is the core rule behind one of the most common English pronoun mistakes
These three words sound the same, but they do completely different jobs
A familiar writing problem: some English words are misspelled again and again because their spelling does not match what many people expect to hear
Pronoun mistakes usually happen when English learners confuse the doer of the action with the receiver of the action
A semicolon can join two closely related independent clauses, or separate items in a complex list when commas alone are not enough
A comma splice happens when two independent clauses are joined with only a comma