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tenses - "I thought we talked..." vs. "I thought we had talked ...
I thought we talked about this before ; I thought we had talked about this before; I've read somewhere that I should use the past perfect tense to indicate past action that occurred prior to another past action, and Past perfect verbs are always formed by using adding ‘had’ before the past participle form of the verb. E.g. had + talked
When do you use "talked" and "spoke"? [duplicate]
I talked to Mary about the party and she said anyone can come. 2) There are phrases that don't work with both words, example: I speak four languages. I talk four languages. Whoever disagrees may speak now or forever hold their peace!
What to call the "things that nobody talks about"?
You get the following list with acceptable alternatives on how to call things that are not to be talked about: banned outlawed prohibited unthinkable anathema disapproved forbidden proscribed reserved restricted unmentionable beyond the pale frowned on illegal off limits out of bounds ruled out unacceptable
grammar - What's the difference between "speak" and "talk ...
We can say "talked to them in words of wisdom" and "talk to them in English". "I'm talking grammar here": A transitive meaning of "talk". This can be used in place of "grammatically speaking", but conveys talking to the audience about grammar rather than simply stating something.
verbs - Is there any difference between "talk to someone" and "talk ...
Possible Duplicate: “Speak to” vs. “Speak with” Well, the question is in the title. I always had the impression that "talk to someone" refers to situations when some information must be conveyed to someone else, while "talk with someone" refers to cases that involve a more complex two-sided interaction.
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