- How do you handle that that? The double that problem
There are three very different uses of that: Subordinating that: “I know that this is the answer ” Demonstrative pronoun that: “ That is not the answer ” Adjectival that: “ That answer is not it ” Double that occurs because the first that is the subordinating that, and the second that is a demonstrative pronoun or adjectival that That is, if you subordinate a clause that begins
- pronouns - When to use “that” and when to use “which”, especially in . . .
Actually, there's more to this than mentioned in some other answers The word that is a subordinator; it is not a relative word like who, where, when, or which Even in integrated relative clauses, they are not always interchangeable When the relative construction follows a fronted preposition, only relative words will do, so relative pronoun which is available, but that isn't We have to
- Are there rules about using that to join two clauses?
He will understand that I was not joking He will understand I was not joking Which of the sentences is correct? Are there any specific rules about the use of quot;that quot; in the sentences I
- Using a comma after that - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
I would like to know if you can use "that" with a comma after it For example: Findings show that, during the initial stages of love, there is increased blood flow to the brain
- word choice - Difference between the and that - English Language . . .
I wonder what the difference between the and that in this context is: A: Hey, I've heard we have a new printer B: Really? Let's print the documents on the that new printer then
- Origin of That tracks to mean That makes sense.
For the past few years, I have been hearing people say quot;that tracks, quot; meaning quot;that makes sense quot; My search on Green's Dictionary of Slang yielded nothing with this clear meani
- Use of what vs that - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
"That" can introduce an explanatory dependent clause "What" cannot "That" indicates a specific quality of the object in question, or a subset of a larger set "What" indicates the object in question itself, or the entire larger set (e g "What was the bird you used to own that was red?") In your example, "what" is incorrect because it creates a logic problem; it establishes an equivalency
- that + would = thatd? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
Is "that'd" an appropriate contraction of "that" and "would"? I say it, but I'm not sure if it's a legitimate contraction in written form
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