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Wu Sam Posted 12 years ago
Grammar

A grammatical question about Verb

Hello everyone, I am a learner of the second language. I have two sentences that I'm not quite sure whose grammatical structure is correct .
1) The difference between A and B is students studying language at classroom.
2) The difference between A and B is students study language at classroom.
3) The difference between A and B is students to study language at classroom.

Can I use the sentence like 4) The difference between A and B is that students study language at classroom ?

Could anyone give me a lot of detail to understand? please
Thanks!!
  

Top answer

the language in a/the classroom. You need to specify which option involves the classroom. Say eg The difference between course A and course B is that in course B the students study the language in a classroom.

  • the language in a/the classroom.
  • You need to specify which option involves the classroom.
  • Say eg The difference between course A and course B is that in course B the students study the language in a classroom.
  • Clive
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4 Answers
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the language in a/the classroom.

You need to specify which option involves the classroom.

Say
eg The difference between course A and course B is that in course B the students study the language in a classroom.

C
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Thank you!
Because of "that" , I don't need to change form of the verb "study"?
It would be possible If "that" were omitted ?
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You can omit 'that', but the sentence reads more smoothly if you don't.


'Study' is Simple Present tense, 3rd person plural; its subject is 'students'.
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Thank your helping.
I got it!

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