@@EnglishwithMaggie you are deserved. I admire you're passionate about English education like me, but I'm EduTech inventor , while you are content producer. Keep up the good work!
@@liangsuhua1Probably you made a typo or skip of the tongue. With due respect, I believe that you should say "you deserved it" and "deserve" is a transitive verb.
Hi Miss Maggie,好多謝你無私的教導!請問可唔可以教吓啲問句?我想搞清楚啲what, who, where, when, how點用!尤其是how!同埋其他形式的問句,例如你片中的have you been living under a rock?雖然我明白這句意思,但我好想從頭正正式式咁學好啲所有問句嘅形式,thank you!
很同意你在影片开頭說的,就是你問一個以英文为母語的人什麽是parts of speech他也可能不能清晰地說出。就像問一個地道香港人中文中各樣詞性,比如說什麼是介詞,而介詞又是怎麼用的,相信也會考起不少人。很多人寫的英文似是疑非,我觉得就是因为搞不清詞性。英文的sentence structure 和中文的句子結構是不能混为一談的
It's because it's an informal noun. One may say that "thumbs up" is an idiom or slang. It originated in Ancient Rome. More details: www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/thumbs-up
David Sylvian is a singer. He sang in a New Wave band called Japan. Not only he sang beautifully but also he looks handsome. Million of girls fans were crazy for him. Miss Maggie, what do ya think about the grammar in this sentence ? 100 % ? Yeaaaahhhhhhhhhhhhh ! Well the only problem I think it's the word "ya" because it's not a formal word in English.
Anson Lo's (proper noun) advertisements (common noun) can (verb) be seen (adverb in passive) everywhere (common noun) in (preposition) Hong Kong (proper noun).
I am a boy, and she is a girl. I am a boy; she is a girl. Both of them are grammatically correct. However, I wonder if "I am a boy, she is a girl." is right.
@@patrickcheung3869 You can use a comma before "and" if it is followed by an independent clause. Some people do and some don't. Here's a reference: owl.purdue.edu/owl/general_writing/punctuation/commas/extended_rules_for_commas.html